Description
After settling in Lebanon in 1867, Félix Bonfils opened a photography studio, La Maison Bonfils, in Beirut. The studio’s photographers produced images across the Mediterranean and Middle East, supplying local tourists and European collectors with photographs illustrating biblical scenes, landscape views, and portraits of all kinds. Bonfils’s images project his allegiance to France, which backed the Maronites, a Christian community, in conflicts over Lebanese land and goods—including desirable exports such as cedar trees. Lebanon’s cedars are referenced often in the Bible, sometimes described as “cedars of God.”
Accession Number
102479
Medium
Albumen print
Dimensions
Image/paper: 28 × 39.2 cm (11 1/16 × 15 7/16 in.); Mount: 48.9 × 62.9 cm (19 5/16 × 24 13/16 in.)
Classification
albumen silver print
Credit Line
Purchased with funds provided by Mr. and Mrs. Richard Menschel
Related Artworks
The Garden of Olives, Jerusalem, No. 576 from the series "Views of Palestine"
Félix Bonfils
Mer Morte et Montagnes de Judée. Palestine (The Dead Sea and the Mountains of Judea, Palestine)
Félix Bonfils
Tombeau de la chrétienne. Vue du côté nord. (Tomb of the Christian Woman. View of the North Side.)
John Beasley Greene
Rook Shooting
Henry Peach Robinson