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Former Nadar workshop à Marseille 1er dans les Bouches-du-Rhône

Former Nadar workshop

    1 Boulevard Dugommier
    13001 Marseille
Ownership of a private company
Crédit photo : Tournachon, Gaspard-Félix - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1897
Foundation of the workshop
1903
Departure from Nadar
28 octobre 1938
Fire of the New Galleries
20 juillet 2012
Registration for Historic Monuments
15 juin 2014
Workshop collapse
octobre 2014
Complaint of voluntary destruction
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The former workshop (on-street building and court workshop) (Box 801 D 121): registration by order of 20 February 2012

Key figures

Gaspard Félix Tournachon (dit Nadar) - Photographer and founder of the workshop Created the workshop in 1897 to 77 years.
Frédéric Mistral - Poet and literary figure Regularly attended the Marseille workshop.
Frères Lumière - Inventors and filmmakers Visiting the workshop during their stay in La Ciotat.
Fernand Detaille - Photographer succeeding Nadar Reprinted the workshop in 1903, the beginning of a family lineage.
Gérard Detaille - Last operator of the workshop Saved historical elements before 1987.
Michel Cadot - Regional prefect in 2014 Filed a complaint for destruction of the monument.

Origin and history

The former Nadar studio, located at 77 de la Canebière in Marseille, was the last studio created by Gaspard Félix Tournachon (1820–1910), dit Nadar, in 1897. At the age of 77, after a 40-year-old Parisian career and a disagreement with his son, Nadar settled in an 18th-century building belonging to the Marseilles Civil Hospices. He set up a large shooting room under glass on the top floor, with laboratories at the lower levels. The workshop became a meeting place for the Marselian artistic and literary elite, welcoming the Lumière brothers, Frédéric Mistral and visiting personalities.

After Nadar's departure in 1903, the workshop was taken over by the Detail family, which operated it over three generations until 1987. Despite the deterioration, the building retained its architectural integrity, resistant even to the fire of the New Galleries in 1938. Disused, it was sold by Public Assistance in 1996 and acquired by the city of Marseille before being transferred to a development company. Despite its listing at the Historic Monuments in 2012, the workshop collapsed in 2014 in suspicious circumstances, resulting in an investigation for voluntary destruction.

The Nadar workshop was a rare testimony of the history of photography in France. Its glass roof and laboratories, intact until they disappeared, illustrated 19th century techniques. The site also housed historical objects, such as signs by Antoine Lumière or decorations, partially saved by Gérard Detaille and exhibited at the Marseille Museum of History. Its destruction has marked the loss of a unique cultural heritage, despite the legal protections and alerts of the heritage authorities.

Post-collapse investigations revealed that the rubble had been quickly cleared, preventing immediate expertise. The Regional Directorate of Cultural Affairs (DRAC) requested an investigation to clarify responsibilities, suggesting possible negligence or organized destruction. Despite two complaints filed in 2014 and 2015, the judicial proceedings sssened, as reported by La Marseillaise in 2016. The case highlighted the flaws in the preservation of the Marseille heritage.

External links