Toulon.

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Toulon.

Creator

Édouard Baldus

French Photographer · 1813–1889

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"[E]veryone knows [Mr.] Baldus," a reviewer wrote in 1859. By the mid-1850s, Édouard-Denis Baldus was the most successful photographer in France and at the height of his career. He began as a painter, turning to photography in 1849 when paper negatives were just becoming popular. Throughout much of his life, he listed himself in city directories as peintre photographe (painter photographer), in re

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Date
about 1861
Medium
Albumen silver print
Culture
French
Department
Photographs
Institution
Getty Museum

Édouard Baldus made this photograph of the newly built train station at Toulon for the Paris-Lyons and Mediterranean Railroad, which commissioned him to document the engineering feats and historical sites along its route. Many railroad companies in America similarly hired photographers to photograph their expanding networks. This image demonstrates the use of glass and cast iron in buildings; extremely popular in France at the time, glass and iron were being used to build everything from libraries and department stores to churches. This proliferation of glass and iron architecture occurred partly as a result of encouragement from Napoleon III, President and Emperor during the Second Empire, who believed that such technological feats best expressed the strength and modernity of France.

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