Antoine Samuel Adam-Salomon
Fontainebleau, Société française de photographie, Legion of Honour, Exposition Universelle (1867)
978-613-7-47740-3
6137477401
112
2011-10-18
39.00 €
eng
https://images.our-assets.com/cover/230x230/9786137477403.jpg
https://images.our-assets.com/fullcover/230x230/9786137477403.jpg
https://images.our-assets.com/cover/2000x/9786137477403.jpg
https://images.our-assets.com/fullcover/2000x/9786137477403.jpg
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Antoine Samuel Adam-Salomon (9 January 1818 – 28 April 1881) was a French sculptor and photographer. Following a brief career as a modeler for the Jacob Petit pottery factory in Fontainebleau, he received a scholarship to study sculpture in Paris, as well as travelling to Switzerland and England. His notable sculptures include busts of Victor Cousin, Odilon Barrot, Pierre-Jean de Béranger, Alphonse de Lamartine, Gioachino Rossini, and Marie Antoinette. Later in his life, Adam-Salomon became a leading portrait photographer after studying under the portraitist Franz Hanfstaengl in Munich in 1858. Adam-Salomon opened a portrait studio in Paris in 1859, and in 1865 he opened a second Paris studio. In 1870 he was made a member of the Société française de photographie and received the Légion d’honneur the same year. Adam-Salomon's portrait photographs were considered to be among the best examples in existence during his lifetime, and were renowned for their chiaroscuro produced by special lighting techniques.
https://www.morebooks.de/books/gb/published_by/miss-press/189859/products
Fine arts
https://www.morebooks.de/store/gb/book/antoine-samuel-adam-salomon/isbn/978-613-7-47740-3