Auguste Mestral
French photographer
Auguste Mestral (1812–1884), also known as O. Mestral, was a French photographer. He travelled with fellow photographers Édouard Baldus, Henri Le Secq, and Gustave Le Gray in the summer of 1851 to photograph architectural monuments in France at the request of the Commission des Monuments Historiques.[1]
Gallery
- Sculpture of Virgin and Child (circa 1851), Notre Dame, Paris
- Sculpture of Angel at Sainte-Chapelle, Paris (circa 1851)
- Angel of the Passion (1853), Sainte-Chapelle, Paris
- Cathédrale St-Pierre à Angoulême (1851) credited to Auguste Mestral and Gustave Le Gray
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Auguste Mestral.
- ^ Lemagny, Jean-Claude; et al. (1986). A History of Photography. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 56–57. ISBN 0-521-34407-7.
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19th-century French photographers
- Louis Daguerre
- Horace Vernet
- Antoine Claudet
- Jean-Baptiste-Louis Gros
- Julien Vallou de Villeneuve
- Antoine Samuel Adam-Salomon
- Marie-Alexandre Alophe
- Édouard Baldus
- Louis-Auguste Bisson
- Adolphe Braun
- Auguste Hippolyte Collard
- André-Adolphe-Eugène Disdéri
- Geneviève Élisabeth Disdéri
- Jules Duboscq
- Jean-Baptiste Frénet
- Henri Le Secq
- Charles Marville
- Auguste Mestral
- Eugène Piot
- Alphonse Louis Poitevin
- Henri Victor Regnault
- Hippolyte Arnoux
- Paul Boyer
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