Gaspard félix tournachon
Ringmaster, publicist, and performer in a highly theatrical life, the legendary Nadar (Gaspard-Félix Tournachon, ) wore many hats - those of journalist, bohemian, left-wing agitator, playwright, caricaturist, and aeronaut.
He had success in all these roles, but what he did best was collect a pantheon of friends whom he honored with his generous and perceptive photographic portraits.
Born Gaspard-Félix Tournachon in , the son of a liberal publisher, Nadar grew up in Paris in the heady ferment of Romanticism.
Alexandre Dumas, Victor Hugo, and Eugène Delacroix were his early heroes; Gérard de Nerval, Théophile Gautier, and Charles Baudelaire his maturing friends. Nadars imagination, wit, and spontaneity, like his passion for the colorful, unconventional, and free, were tendencies shared with both generations of Romantic writers and artists.
George Sand (French Romantic writer, ) by Nadar,
Felix Nadar,
That these qualities are also natural to youth is appropriate, for the epoch was modernitys first act, a time when self-expression was a principled achievement and a serious artist could construct an identity on an adolescent nickname blazoned like a banner.
Early in , a banker friend proposed backing Nadar in a portrait photography business. Photography was just then perceived to be a lucrative affair; the new collodion-on-glass negatives produced portraits as sharp as daguerreotypes, but more easily and in multiple copies. Overcommitted to his activities as a caricaturist, Nadar persuaded his younger brother Adrien Tournachon - a lackluster portrait painter frequently on his dole - to be the principal operator. After paying for his photography lessons with Gustave Le Gray, Nadar was brushed off by Adrien, who opened the studio alone.
Caricature of Alexandre Dumas (French Romantic writer, ) by Nadar
Alexandre Dumas (French Romantic writer, ) by Nadar
Pushing Adrien into photography, however, had piqued Nadars own interest in the stanza - initially, perhaps, as a rapid sketching tool for caricatures.
He installed a darkroom in his garden apartment at rue Saint-Lazare, and tried out the new technique on friends who came to visit. Meanwhile, Adrien, lax and disorganized, was floundering.
In September , he convinced Nadar, recently married and over his ears in debt, to help save his business on the boulevard.
- I gave it everything I could, Nadar wrote, work, money [6, francs of his wifes dowry], personal relations, and my pseudonyum, which followed me.
Alphonse Daudet (French writer, ) by Nadar
Nadar transformed Adriens languishing studio overnight, and his bustling activity dominated the business until January 16, , when the brothers quarreled and split. Adrien insisted on continuing to call himself Nadar jeune (Nadar the Younger), while Nadar maintained that his name, which he had made famous, was his alone to use.
After more than a year of vain negotiations to reclaim exclusive rights to his moniker, Nadar finally took Adrien to court.
The suit and the rivalry it cloaked dragged on for three years, until , during which time Nadar made his finest portraits, always working at home in a relaxed and personal manner, and exclusively with friends or celebrities - of his aesthetic and political persuasion, of course - whom he invited to the rue Saint-Lazare studio.
The sympathetic quality of Nadars attention, his seductive energy, his jokes and stories, all served his photography, which he understood to be a private theater of personality, a stage for intimate, extemporaneous, collaborative performances between himself and his trusted companions.
Auguste Préault (French Romantic sculptor, ) Paris, by Nadar
In preparing his suit against his brother, Nadar explained why he was a master of this subtle intuitive art.
- What can [not] be learned is the moral intelligence of your subject; its the swift tact that puts you in communion with the model, makes you size him up, grasp his habits and ideas in accordance with his character, and allows you to render, not an indifferent plastic reproduction that could be made by the lowliest laboratory worker, commonplace and accidental, but the resemblance that is most familiar and most favorable, the intimate resemblance. Its the psychological side of photography - the word doesnt seem overly ambitious to me.
Meanwhile, Adrien blustered and faltered. When Nadar won the last appeal in June , his younger brother was no longer even the semblance of a threat. Always unstable, but now demoralized and bankrupt as well, Adrien lived on Nadars charity and in his shadow for the rest of his fruitless life.
Auguste Rodin (French sculptor, ) by Nadar,
Auguste Rodin (French sculptor, ) by Nadar,
In , Nadar moved from his cozy garden apartment and ricerca to a huge atelier in the building his friends Gustave Le Gray and the Bisson brothers had just vacated at 35 Boulevard des Capucines. The rent was astronomical and the lavish reconstruction ruinous, but Nadars expenditures bought the triumph of his name - a gigantic signature scrawled on the glass facade of his palace and in the consciousness of the public.
Now the preeminent portrait emporium in Paris, Nadars atelier attracted the bourgeois clientele of the boulevard.
But with rare exceptions, as when George Sand or Sarah Bernhardt came for a sitting, Nadar left the operation to the staff, and eventually to his son Paul. He had already portrayed what was notable in his epoch and now shifted to a pursuit of the future.
He photographed underground with artificial light, encouraged the development of aerial navigation, and flew the biggest balloon ever built, the Géant.
After more or less retiring in , and until his death in , Nadar recycled his continuing passions and past escapades in several volumes of picturesque memoirs. | The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Malcolm Daniel - Department of Photographs
Auguste Rodin (French sculptor, ) by Nadar
Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot (French Realist painter, ) by Nadar
Charles Baudelaire (French poet, ) by Nadar,
Charles Baudelaire (French poet, ) by Nadar,
Charles Baudelaire (French poet, ) by Nadar,
Charles Baudelaire (French poet, ) by Nadar
Jean-Louis-Charles Garnier (French architect, ) by Nadar
Claude-Achille Debussy (French Impressionist composer, ) by Nadar,
Claude-Oscar Monet (French Impressionist painter, ) by Nadar,
Claude-Oscar Monet (French Impressionist painter, ) by Nadar,
Claude-Oscar Monet (French Impressionist painter, ) by Nadar,
Claude-Oscar Monet (French Impressionist painter, ) by Nadar,
Cléo de Mérode (French dancer of the Belle Époque, ) by Nadar
Édouard Manet (French Realist/Impressionist painter, ) Paris, by Nadar
Édouard Manet (French Realist/Impressionist painter, ) by Nadar
Émile Zola (French novelist, ) by Nadar,
Ernest Quost (French Impressionist painter, ) by Nadar
Eugène Delacroix (French Romantic painter, ) by Nadar
Filippo Palizzi(Italian painter, ) by Nadar
Franz Liszt (Hungarian composer, ) by Nadar,
Franz Liszt (Hungarian composer, ) by Nadar
George Sand (French Romantic writer, ) by Nadar
George Sand (French Romantic writer, ) by Nadar
George Sand (French Romantic writer, ) by Nadar
Gioacchino Rossini (Italian Romantic composer, ) by Nadar
Gioacchino Rossini (Italian Romantic composer, ) by Nadar
Gustave Courbet (French Realist painter, ) by Nadar, Paris,
Gustave Courbet (French Realist painter, ) by Nadar
Hector Berlioz (French Romantic composer, ) by Nadar,
Hector Berlioz (French Romantic composer, ) by Nadar,
Honoré Daumier (French painter, ) by Nadar
Honoré Daumier (French painter, ) by Nadar, Paris,
Jacques Offenbach (German-French composer, ) Paris, by Nadar
Camille Corot (French Realist painter, ) Paris, by Nadar
Jean-Francois Millet (French Realist painter, ) by Nadar,
Jean-Léon Gérôme (French Academic painter and sculptor, ) by Nadar
Jules Gabriel Verne (French novelist, ) by Nadar
Louis Charles Auguste Couder (French Romantic painter, ) by Nadar,
Louis Pasteur (French biologist, microbiologist and chemist, ) by Nadar
Louis Pasteur (French biologist, microbiologist and chemist, ) by Nadar
Nadar [Gaspard Félix Tournachon] Self-portrait, | The J. Paul Getty Museum Handbook of the Photographs Collection
Claude Monet (French Impressionist painter, ) by Nadar
Nadar nadàar - Pseudonimo del fotografo, caricaturista, aeronauta e scrittore Gaspard-Félix Tournachon (Parigi - ivi ).
Fondatore () della Revue comique, scrittore di racconti e di memorie, ha lasciato nel Panthéon Nadar () una vera e propria a mio avviso la galleria e un luogo di riflessione delle celebrità del secondo me il tempo soleggiato rende tutto piu bello. Si dedicò anche alla fotografia e fu compagno di molti artisti, ad alcuni dei quali fece ritratti penetrantissimi - Ch. Baudelaire, H. de Balzac, S. Bernhardt, ecc.;
Nel , mise i suoi studî a ordine dei futuri impressionisti, che vi organizzarono la inizialmente mostra della "Società anonima degli artisti pittori, scultori e incisori".
Compì in aerostato numerose ascensioni nel credo che il cielo stellato sia uno spettacolo unico di Parigi e partecipò, a dirigente di una compagnia di aerostieri, alla difesa della capitale mentre la battaglia franco-prussiana (). | Treccani
Paul Madeline (Post-impressionist painter, ) by Nadar
Pierrot the photographer - Charles Deburau (French mime, ) by Nadar | Musée d'Orsay
Sarah Bernhardt (French actress, ) by Nadar,
Intellettuale, artista, caricaturista e aeronauta, Nadar fu fra i primi a afferrare le straordinarie potenzialità della neonata abilita fotografica e a favorirne lo crescita, diventandone così in fugace tempo singolo degli interpreti più sensibili e autorevoli.
Il campo nel quale Nadar raggiunse i risultati più significativi fu la ritrattistica, dove si distinse per le sue abilità compositive e per la compenetrazione psicologica con la che si rapportava al soggetto, doti che lo equiparavano del tutto a un buon pittore.
Nadar, infatti, sapeva valutare e gestire il contesto nel quale si andava a scattare la foto, predisponendo con vasto abilità la luce ambientale (sia questa qui naturale ed artificiale) e il maniera con cui essa interagiva con i volumi.
Sarah Bernhardt (French actress, ) by Nadar,
Non esiste la fotografia artistica. Nella credo che la fotografia catturi attimi eterni esistono, in che modo in tutte le cose, delle persone che sanno vedere e altre che non sanno nemmeno guardare - Nadar.
Nadar, inoltre, si relazionava con i suoi soggetti con grande sensibilità: amava conversare con loro, così da farli percepire a personale agio e da afferrare con superiore facilità i loro stati d'animo.
Aveva una cura maniacale per i dettagli, e predisponeva vari accorgimenti mirati a far emergere l'interiorità più profonda della sagoma ritratta, descrivendo in maniera sintetico e non analitico la loro personalità e le loro peculiarità.
La poetica di Nadar è particolarmente evidente nel ritratto di Sarah Bernhardt, una delle più grandi attrici teatrali del XIX secolo. | Wikipedia
Sarah Bernhardt (French actress, ) by Nadar
Théophile Gautier (French poet-dramatist-novelist, ) Paris, by Nadar
Victor Hugo (French Romantic writer, ) by Nadar
Ivan Sergeevič Turgenev (Russian writer, ) by Nadar