Édouard Baldus

Photographer, Visual Artist

1813 – 1889

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Who was Édouard Baldus?

Édouard-Denis Baldus was a French landscape, architectural and railway photographer.

Baldus was originally trained as a painter and had also worked as a draughtsman and lithographer before switching to photography in 1849. In 1851, he was commissioned for the Missions Héliographiques by the Historic Monuments Commission of France to photograph historic buildings, bridges and monuments, many of which were being razed to make way for the grand boulevards of Paris, being carried out under the direction of Napoleon III's prefect Baron Georges-Eugène Haussmann.

The high quality of his work won him government support for a project entitled Les Villes de France Photographiées, an extended series of architectural views in Paris and the provinces designed to feed a resurgent interest in the nation's Roman and medieval past.

In 1855, Baron James de Rothschild, President of Chemin de Fer du Nord, commissioned Baldus to do a series of photographs to be used as part of an album that was to be a gift to Queen Victoria and Prince Albert as a souvenir of their visit to France that year. The lavishly bound album is still among the treasures of the Royal Library at Windsor Castle.

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Born
Jun 5, 1813
Grünebach
Also known as
  • Edouard Baldus
  • Édouard-Denis Baldus
Nationality
  • France
Profession
Died
Dec 1, 1889

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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