Jules Couppier
Glass Stereoviews 1853-1860
by Janice G. Schimmelman
This is the price your customers see. Edit price list
About the Book
Since I wrote this book, I found this reference to his death. It completes his story: ‘We all knew Mons. Jules Couppeau [sic], of Paris, who had acquired a reputation by some remarkable stereoscopic pictures on glass, and we all are aware that he died from incautiousness in the use of cyanide [of potassium].' Ernest Lacan, ‘Foreign Correspondence, Paris, February 25, 1861,' The British Journal of Photography 8, no. 137 (1 March 1861): 96.
Features & Details
- Primary Category: Arts & Photography Books
-
Project Option: Standard Landscape, 10×8 in, 25×20 cm
# of Pages: 194 - Publish Date: Jul 16, 2018
- Language English
- Keywords stereoview, photography, Couppier, Collodion Press
About the Creator
Janice G. Schimmelman is Professor Emerita of Art History at Oakland University, Rochester, Michigan. She is a scholar of nineteenth-century American art and photography. Her research has been published by the American Philosophical Society, the American Antiquarian Society, Oak Knoll Press, G. K. Hall, and the Winterthur Portfolio. She is the author of The Tintype in America 1856-1880 and American Photographic Patents 1840-1880. Through the Collodion Press (blurb.com), she has also written and published The Iron Plate in American Photography, Twelve for a Quarter: The American Gem Tintype, The Early Paper Stereoviews of Claude-Marie Ferrier, Brewster, Duboscq & the Early Printed Stereoview, and The Glass Stereoviews of Ferrier & Soulier..