Ferme du Parc de Courances
Eugène Cuvelier
(French, 1837–1900)
1860s
Medium/TechniquePhotograph, salt print from paper negative, gold toned
DimensionsImage: 25.6 x 33.4 cm (10 1/16 x 13 1/8 in.)
Mount: 56.2 x 70.9 cm (22 1/8 x 27 15/16 in.)
Mount: 56.2 x 70.9 cm (22 1/8 x 27 15/16 in.)
Credit LineEdwin E. Jack Fund, William Francis Warden Fund, Arthur Tracy Cabot Fund, Gift of Jessie H. Wilkinson -- Jessie H. Wilkinson Fund, Susan Cornelia Warren Fund, Mary L. Smith Fund, Seth K. Sweetser Fund, Ernest Wadsworth Longfellow Fund, Helen B. Sweeney Fund, Frank M. and Mary T. B. Ferrin Fund, and Alice M. Bartlett Fund
Accession number2007.353
On View
Not on viewClassificationsPhotographs
Collections
Eugene Cuvelier was an important early photographer who worked in the northern French town of Arras and then in the region of Barbizon and the forest of Fontainebleau. His style was influenced by his Barbizon painter friends, including Camille Corot and Theodore Rousseau, and his work reveals the rich dialogue between French painting and photography in this period. His images express, in theme and variation, the moods of the rural landscape. This monumental view of a barn and clump of trees evokes the moody, forlorn atmosphere of the estate of the Chateau de Courances, which was located about ten miles from Fontainebleau and had been abandoned for some thirty years.
InscriptionsNumbered 296 by the photographer in the negative; titled by an unidentified hand in graphite on mount, l.r.: Ferme du Parc de CourancesProvenanceJohn Chandler Bancroft, Middletown, R.I.; to Gustave J.S. White Co., Auctioneers, Newport, R.I., 1989; sold to Mack Lee and William S. Schaeffer, 1989; to unknown collectors; sold at Sotheby's New York, April 13, 2007; purchased at auction by MFA April 13, 2007
Charles Marville (born Charles François Bossu)