Zoological Garden

Louis-Pierre-Théophile Dubois de Nehaut French

Not on view

A judge at the magistrate's court in Lille, France, Dubois de Nehaut left the bench after the rise to power of Napoleon III. He then settled in Brussels in 1851 and pursued his interest in photography. This photograph is from a unique album of thirty-two plates that includes the artist's droll comments about his subjects, the qualities of the prints, and the difficulties he encountered while making them. It is entirely possible that this view of the newly opened zoo in Brussels does not actually record a single exotic bird, reptile, or quadruped-standard fare at such theme parks even in the mid-nineteenth century. It does, however, document the presence of a mammal: a human in the left foreground seated on the sole park bench-a convenient stand-in for the artist contemplating the same enchanting scene.

Zoological Garden, Louis-Pierre-Théophile Dubois de Nehaut (French, active Belgium, 1799–1872), Salted paper print from paper negative

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