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  1. Charles Marville, the pseudonym of Charles François Bossu (Paris 17 July 1813 – 1 June 1879 Paris), was a French photographer, who mainly photographed architecture, landscapes and the urban environment.

  2. Las fotografías icónicas de París del siglo XX, en el Metropolitan Museum de Nueva York, de Charles Marville, son ampliamente reconocidas como unas de las imágenes más brillantes del s. XIX. La instalación se centra principalmente en vistas de arquitectura, escenas decalle e interiores.

  3. From 1862, as official photographer for the city of Paris, he documented aspects of the radical modernization program that had been launched by Emperor Napoleon III and his chief urban planner, Baron Georges-Eugène Haussmann.

  4. From 1862, as official photographer for the city of Paris, he documented aspects of the radical modernization program that had been launched by Emperor Napoleon III and his chief urban planner, Baron Georges-Eugène Haussmann.

  5. Charles Marville, the pseudonym of Charles François Bossu (Paris 17 July 1813 – 1 June 1879 Paris), was a French photographer, who mainly photographed architecture, landscapes and the urban environment. He used both paper and glass negatives.

  6. 4 de may. de 2014 · Widely acknowledged as one of the most talented photographers of the 19th century, Charles Marville (French, 1813–1879) was commissioned by the city of Paris to document both the picturesque, medieval streets of old Paris and the broad boulevards and grand public structures that Baron Georges-Eugène Haussmann built in their place ...

  7. Charles Marville French. 1865–1868. On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 692. Marville’s photograph reveals the centuries-old square of Saint-André-des-Arts as a disparate clump of buildings plastered with sundry advertisements for baths, mechanical beds, sign and letter painting, and a moving company—the last surely a common sight.