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Photograph by Ed Pollard, Hasselblad H4D50 - 2015.
Crue de la Seine. Quai Debilly. Paris, Juillet 1910
Photograph by Ed Pollard, Hasselblad H4D50 - 2015.
Photograph by Ed Pollard, Hasselblad H4D50 - 2015.

Crue de la Seine. Quai Debilly. Paris, Juillet 1910

Artist Préfecture de Police de Paris, Service de l'Identité Judiciaire (French, active 1870 - 1900)
CultureFrench
DateJuly 1910
MediumGelatin silver print
DimensionsOverall, Image: 9 7/16 × 11 13/16 in. (24 × 30 cm)
Overall, Mat: 16 × 20 in. (40.6 × 50.8 cm)
InscribedNone
Credit LineMuseum purchase
Object number2015.13.5
Not on view
DescriptionThis is one of a pair of photos showing a dry street, with a line of buildings to the left and line of trees to the right, bordering a riverbank. It was created on the Quai Debilly in the 16e Arrondissement, just north of the Trocadéro and the Pont d’Iena, facing northeast (with the Seine to the right). Since 1945 the Quai Debilly has been known as the Avenue de New York, and these pictures were made roughly in front of the current No. 52 Avenue de New York, with the gates of the mansion housing the Mona Bismarck American Center for Art and Culture (at 34 Avenue de New York) visible in the distance. Although the flood of 1910 devastated the suburbs, the high banks of the Seine protected much of central Paris from direct threat from the flowing river, with flooding instead caused by water seeping up from tunnels, sewers, and drains. This point on the Quai Debilly, however, was an exception, with a shallow layer of water from the river crossing the street to reach the first line of buildings. Thus, this area of the city was captured by many photographers during the weeks of the flood. This photo was taken six months after the flood, which happened on January 28, 1910, with waters well over 6 meters above their normal high levels. See object 2015.13.4.
ProvenanceEstates of photography dealers Hugues Autexier and Francois Braunschweig (both deceased in 1986), former proprietors of Galerie Texbraun, a prominent Paris gallery of early French photography. Acquired at Paris auction in a group of about 30 "Crue de la Seine" photographs by Charles Isaacs Photographs, Inc. Purchased from Charles Isaacs Photographs, Inc., by Chrysler Museum of Art, September 2015.