Photograph Collection

The Musée Bourdelle's photograph collections include around 20,000 documents dating from 1880 to the present day. Most of them were donated to the City of Paris by the artist's daughter, Rhodia Dufet Bourdelle, in 1995. Extremely rich and of undeniable aesthetic quality, the collections consist of around 13,800 prints of various types and around 5,500 negatives, on glass or on a flexible film base. This monographic set provides a first-hand insight into the artist's private and professional life. It includes photographs collected by Bourdelle throughout his life: reproductions of works of art that make up a veritable museum in picture form, as well as photographs of Bourdelle’s own sculptures, paintings and drawings, taken by the artist himself or under his direction. They provide a documentary record and, at the same time, serve an aesthetic purpose. Bourdelle also conceptualised and supervised numerous shots of his studio, models, students, friends, collectors and exhibitions devoted to him. Photographs of family members and prints given to the artist by his various acquaintances complete the museum’s photographic collection.

Edwin Bucher working on the Kiss marble

Attributed to Emile Antoine Bourdelle • circa 1903 - 1904 • Domaine public, Domaine public

Montauban 1870 - Monument exhibited at the Société Nationale des Beaux Arts in 1902

Attributed to Emile Antoine Bourdelle • 1902 • Domaine public

Monument to Adam Mickiewicz at the Salon des Tuileries, 1927

Attributed to Emile Antoine Bourdelle • 1927 • Domaine public

Isadora Duncan at Vélizy

Anonymous • 1903 • © droits réservés

Apples with a screen in the background

Attributed to Emile Antoine Bourdelle • 1907 - 1929 • Domaine public

Bourdelle in the studio, beside the Dying Warrior

Anonymous • 1893 - 1905 • Domaine public

Bourdelle working on the frescoes for the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées

Jacques ROSEMAN • circa 1913 • © droits réservés

Torso of Pallas

Emile Antoine BOURDELLE • circa 1905 • Domaine public

Bourdelle and his Self-Portrait in the studio

Albert HARLINGUE • circa 1908 • © droits réservés

Antoine Bourdelle holding a cat

Anonymous • circa 1925 • Domaine public