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Sculptures from the Parthenon, British Museum — Adolphe Braun

Adolphe Braun · c. 1870s

Sculptures from the Parthenon, British Museum

Year
c. 1870s
Original process
Carbon transfer print
Held at
Cleveland Museum of Art

Key facts

Edition
Signed and numbered limited edition
Authenticity
Official certificate of authenticity
Chemistry
Non-toxic process (Vision Picturale recipes)
Year
c. 1870s
Original held at
Cleveland Museum of Art
Public domain
Since 1948 (CPI L.123-1)
Printer
Maison Picturale — Paris 20e studio
Lead time
Hand-made · 4 to 8 weeks

Maison Picturale reinterpretation in carbon transfer

About this work

Carbon print reproduction of the Elgin Marbles (sculptures from the Parthenon) at the British Museum, by Jean Adolphe Braun (1812-1877), the Alsatian photographer-industrialist who founded the Braun studio at Dornach in the 1850s and turned it into a full industrial photographic enterprise by 1860. The plate exemplifies the vast industrial reproduction programme that defined Braun's mature career: by 1869 his Dornach atelier had photographed thousands of artworks for the leading European museums, producing permanent carbon copies sold to scholars, libraries and the luxury album market. The programme was made possible by Braun's 1864 acquisition of the Swan licence to the carbon transfer process — Braun was the first to industrialise the procedure in continental Europe, employing up to 200 staff at Dornach and securing official photographic contracts with the Louvre, the Vatican and the British Museum. Holdings of the museum-reproduction series are dispersed between the Cleveland Museum of Art (1998.161, which preserves this print), the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the J. Paul Getty Museum, the Library of Congress and the Musée Unterlinden in Colmar (principal Braun studio archive). Procédé Transposition Maison Picturale: this Parthenon plate is reinterpreted as a direct-monochrome charbon print using the non-toxic chemistry reformulated by Vision Picturale, with pigmented gelatin in Noir Musée or Couleur Profonde tissues transferred onto 640 g/m² cotton paper — the direct contemporary equivalent of the carbon transfer Braun industrialised, preserving the modelled volumes of the marble and the archival permanence the original reproductions secured, without the dichromate hazards of the Swan-Braun workflow.

Reference file : Wikimedia Commons / Cleveland Museum of Art (CC0)

Procédé Transposition

Each Maison Picturale print is a material reinterpretation of the image. Three readings of the same work — the original, its closest transposition, and a creative transposition into another procédé.

Multi-tone carbon transfer — the most permanent material in all of photography. Contemporary reinvention of the 1855 Poitevin procédé.

MP procédé — reformulated non-toxic chemistry, signed by Tristan Sidem.

View the procédé

History of the process

Le procédé charbon est inventé en 1864 par Joseph Wilson Swan, chimiste et inventeur britannique également connu pour ses travaux sur la lampe à incandescence. Il présente le procédé devant la Royal Photographic Society de Londres la même année, breveté sous le nom de Carbon Process. Le principe : une gélatine pigmentée durcie par exposition UV à travers un négatif, puis transférée sur un papier final.

Très rapidement, le charbon devient le procédé de référence des éditeurs photographiques sérieux. Les héliographes des frères Lumière à Lyon, l'Autotype Company à Londres et la maison Braun à Dornach en font leur procédé industriel pour la reproduction d'œuvres d'art destinées aux musées. Les épreuves charbon de la fin XIXe conservées au Musée d'Orsay, à la George Eastman House de Rochester et au Metropolitan Museum of Art présentent encore aujourd'hui leur densité maximale intacte.

Our approach

Le tirage charbon Maison Picturale est une pièce unique réalisée à la main par les artisans tireurs de l'atelier 1 Passage Dagorno, Tristan Sidem et Raphaël Lebas de Lacour. Chaque épreuve charbon demande plusieurs jours de travail : préparation de la gélatine pigmentée, exposition UV, transfert sur papier final, séchage contrôlé. C'est un procédé strictement muséal, destiné aux collectionneurs sérieux et aux institutions.

Notre papier aquarelle satiné 100 % coton 640 g/m² est particulièrement adapté au charbon : son grammage soutient le transfert de gélatine pigmentée sans déformation, et sa surface satinée révèle pleinement le léger bas-relief signature du procédé en lumière rasante. Ce papier de conservation, sans azurants optiques, garantit la pérennité plurisééculaire de l'œuvre.

Inside our studio

1 Passage Dagorno, Paris 20e. Each print is hand-crafted by Tristan Sidem and Raphaël Lebas de Lacour, using Vision Picturale's reformulated non-toxic chemistry. Limited edition, signed and numbered.

The procédé at work — each layer laid by hand
The procédé at work — each layer laid by hand
Tristan Sidem, master printer
Tristan Sidem, master printer
The 1 Passage Dagorno studio, Paris 20e
The 1 Passage Dagorno studio, Paris 20e

Commission this print

  • Hand-printed and signed by Tristan Sidem & Raphaël Lebas de Lacour
  • Reformulated non-toxic chemistry (Vision Picturale recipes)
  • Limited edition, numbered, certificate of authenticity
  • 1 Passage Dagorno studio, Paris 20e
  • Delivery 3 to 5 weeks · ships worldwide from France

Available formats

  • 30 × 40 cmFrom 280
  • 40 × 50 cmFrom 420
  • 50 × 70 cmFrom 680
  • 70 × 100 cmFrom 1180
  • Custom sizeFrom 1850

Indicative pricing — the exact rate depends on the chosen procédé, support and finish.

Order a custom print

Contemporary print after a work in the public domain (CPI L.123-1, 70 years post-mortem). Hand-crafted reinterpretation by Maison Picturale's master printers — this is not an original vintage by the master. The mention 'after [Master]' is systematic on the print and on the certificate of authenticity.