![[Organ Grinder at 21, quai Bourbon, Ile Saint-Louis, Paris]](https://media.getty.edu/iiif/image/aed5750c-3dcb-47e1-93ae-e20d495f322a/full/808,/0/default.jpg)
Getty Museum
[Organ Grinder at 21, quai Bourbon, Ile Saint-Louis, Paris]
Creator
Charles NègreFrench Photographer · 1820–1880
All works by this person →Charles Nègre began to photograph in 1844 in order to collect visual images to use in preparation for his paintings. Unlike many painters who turned to the new medium, Nègre never ceased to paint. He is best known for his landscape and architectural photographs of Paris, Chartres, and the Midi, a region in southern France. Unlike many of his contemporaries, Nègre printed all of his own photographs
More on Getty ULAN- Date
- before March or May 1853
- Medium
- Salted paper print from a paper negative
- Culture
- French
- Department
- Photographs
- Institution
- Getty Museum
> Amidst a rapidly changing urban landscape, Charles Nègre photographed traditional street people. The itinerant musician, stooped slightly from the weight of his instrument, is about to enter a door. One foot stands on the step and his hand rests upon the doorknob. In comparison with André-Adolphe-Eugene Disdéri's *Organ-Grinder* (link to 90.Xm.56.4) made around the same time, this musician is depicted at the weary end of a day's labor rather than playing his instrument. > > Because exposure times in the 1850s prevented much spontaneity, Charles Nègre had to pose his subject upon the threshold in a stance that the organ-grinder could maintain for the duration of the exposure. The vignette effect of the print's darkened edges was a technical sacrifice that Nègre accepted in order to shorten his exposure time. Serving also as a frame for the subject, the dark rim draws the viewer's attention to the isolated figure and produces a more focused image. > > Both Nègre and Disdéri heroicized the workingman a decade before Gustave Courbet and Jean-François Millet did so in painting. In the process, they aligned themselves with the Realist movement in art and literature. Adapted from getty.edu, Interpretive Content Department, 2008; and Weston Naef, *The J. Paul Getty Museum Handbook of the Photographs Collection* (Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 1995), 57, © 1995 The J. Paul Getty Museum.
The authoritative record is held by Getty Museum. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Get printable QR codesHide QR codes
Open QR codes for this object page and the museum record. They stay collapsed until needed.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Getty Museum and other institutions.