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BIOGRAPHIES
NADAR
France, 1820-1910
French writer, caricaturist, and photographer who is remembered
primarily for his photographic portraits, which are considered to
be among the best done in the 19th century.
As a young man, he studied medicine in Lyon, Fr., but, when his
father's publishing house went bankrupt in 1838, he was forced to
earn his own livelihood. He began to write newspaper articles that
he signed "Nadar." In 1842 Nadar settled in Paris and
began to sell caricatures to humour magazines.
By 1853, although he still considered himself primarily a caricaturist,
he had become an expert photographer and had opened a portrait studio.
Nadar's immediate success stemmed partly from his sense of showmanship.
He had the entire building that housed his studio painted red and
his name printed in gigantic letters across a 50-foot (15-metre)
expanse of wall. The building became a local landmark and a favourite
meeting place of the intelligentsia of Paris. When, in 1874, the
painters later known as Impressionists needed a place to hold their
first exhibit, Nadar lent them his gallery. He was greatly pleased
by the storm the exhibit raised; the notoriety was good for business.
In 1854 he completed his first "PanthéonNadar,"
a set of two gigantic lithographs portraying caricatures of prominent
Parisians. When he began work on the second "Panthéon-Nadar,"
he made photographic portraits of the persons he intended to caricature.
His portraits of the illustrator Gustave Doré (c. 1855) and
the poet Charles Baudelaire (1855) are direct and naturally posed,
in contrast to the stiff formality of most contemporaneous portraits.
Other remarkable character studies are those of the writer Théophile
Gautier (c. 1855) and the painter Eugène Delacroix (1855).
Nadar was a tireless innovator. In 1855 he patented the idea of
using aerial photographs in mapmaking and surveying. It was not
until 1858, however, that he was able to make a successful aerial
photograph, the world's first, from a balloon. This led Daumier
to issue a satirical lithograph of Nadar photographing Paris from
a balloon. It was titled "Nadar Raising Photography to the
Height of Art."
Nadar remained a passionate aeronaut until he and his wife and
other passengers were injured in an accident in Le Géant,
a gigantic balloon he had built.
In 1858 he began to photograph by electric light, making a series
of photographs of Paris sewers. And, in 1886, he made the first
"photo interview," a series of 21 photographs of the French
scientist Eugène Chevreul in conversation. Each picture was
captioned with Chevreul's responses to Nadar's questions, giving
a vivid impression of the scientist's personality. Nadar also wrote
novels, essays, satires, and autobiographical works.
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