Le Chat Noir. Boulevard de Clichy. Paris. - source PARIS de mes Amours.
134 notes
·
View notes
Boulevard de Clichy, Paris. 1951
Photo: Louis Stettner
89 notes
·
View notes
Bonjour, bonne journée ☕️ 🐶
Avenue de Clichy🗼Paris 1948
Photo de Édouard Boubat
74 notes
·
View notes
Moulin Rouge is a cabaret in Paris, on Boulevard de Clichy, at Place Blanche, the intersection of, and terminus of Rue Blanche. In 1889, the Moulin Rouge was co-founded by Charles Zidler and Joseph Oller, who also owned the Paris Olympia. The original venue was destroyed by fire in 1915. Wikipedia
73 notes
·
View notes
Moulin Rouge, 82 Boulevard de Clichy, Paris, France - The house was co-founded in 1889 by Charles Zidler and Joseph Oller, 1889
15 notes
·
View notes
The Boulevard de Clichy under Snow, 1875-6 by Norbert Goeneutte (French, 1854--1894)
770 notes
·
View notes
Snow: Boulevard de Clichy, Paris, 1886. Paul Signac.
Oil on canvas.
206 notes
·
View notes
Cabaret du Chat noir, photographie de presse, Agence Rol, juin 1928.
Le cabaret Le Chat noir, à Montmartre, était l’un des hauts lieux artistiques de la fin du XIX° siècle. Il doit son nom à la découverte, sur son chantier, d’un petit chat noir abandonné.
Le Chat noir, boulevard de Clichy, en 1929.
88 notes
·
View notes
Louis Stettner Boulevard de Clichy
50 notes
·
View notes
Boulevard de Clichy, Paris, 1951
Louis Stettner
61 notes
·
View notes
Boulevard de Clichy, Photo by Louis Stettner, 1951
81 notes
·
View notes
Louis Stettner
BOULEVARD DE CLICHY, 1951
35 notes
·
View notes
The original Moulin Rouge in Autochrome Lumière color, before the fire of February 27, 1915 that destroyed it. It was rebuilt and reopened in 1925 where it still operates at the foot of Montmarte hill in the Paris district of Pigalle on Boulevard de Clichy in the 18th arrondissement
Near the end of the 19th century and at the beginning of the 20th, during the Belle Époque, many artists lived, worked, or had studios in or around Montmartre, including Amedeo Modigliani, Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Edgar Degas, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Suzanne Valadon, Piet Mondrian, Pablo Picasso, Camille Pissarro and Vincent van Gogh.
Montmartre, which, at the heart of an increasingly vast and impersonal Paris, retained a bohemian village atmosphere; festivities and artists mixed with pleasure and beauty as their values.
The Moulin Rouge still stands as one of the few remaining artifacts connected with the original Bohemian Movement that began in Paris in the middle of the 19th Century.
41 notes
·
View notes