Cityscape of Geneva

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Cityscape of Geneva

Creator

Jean-Gabriel Eynard

Swiss Daguerreotypist · 1775–1863

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Jean-Gabriel Eynard was a wealthy amateur photographer who made photographs chiefly for his own amusement. He learned the daguerreotype process in Paris in the early 1840s, not long after the invention of the process was announced in 1839. His financial independence afforded him the time and ability to practice photography, which in its infancy was an expensive pastime and difficult to master. Ass

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Date
about 1847
Medium
Daguerreotype
Culture
Swiss
Department
Photographs
Institution
Getty Museum

Jean-Gabriel Eynard made two views of Geneva, which together form a panorama of a section of his adopted city. He stood in the old city on the left bank of the Rhone River, looking toward the quays along the right bank. A wide bridge crosses the river, connecting with a short footbridge to wooded Rousseau Island, named after the famous writer and philosopher of the 1700s, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, a native of Geneva.

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