Bruno Tartarin present remarkable group of 19th-century photographs for their first exhibition. An iconic Grande Vague de Sète by Gustave Le Gray, dated 1857, stands alongside a rare portrait, attributed to Charles DeForest Fredricks, of a Dakota Indian delegation in 1858. One of only three known copies of a photograph of Annie Rogers with angel wings, taken by Lewis Carroll in 1861 in the early days of his photographic career, immortalises the child dozing on a chaise longue. Carroll gave her one of the first copies of Alice in Wonderland, which he began writing the following year. Middle 20th-century photography will not be forgotten, with the presentation of some of the most ingenious processes, Alexandre Vitkine's photographic experiments, and the astonishing photograms and rayograms of Floris Michael Neusüss and Man Ray.
APhoto Discovery / The Place