Close
Cart (0)
Login
Register
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
Hide details
Conceptually similar
AR9640790
AR9640781
AR9640789
AR9640791
AR9640788
AR9640792
AR9640795
AR9640783
AR9640797
AR9640796
AR9640779
AR9640793
AR9640785
AR9640787
AR9640786
AR9640794
AR9640780
AR9640798
AR9640784
AR9640776
Statue of Pierre-Antoine Berryer, 1790-1868, French lawyer, 1879, by Henri-Michel-Antoine Chapu, 1833-91, in the Salle des Pas Perdus, or Hall of Lost Causes, an enormous vestibule leading to the courthouses, in the Palais de Justice or Paris Law Courts, on the Ile de la Cite, Paris, France. Berryer was a royalist but nevertheless defended the 1848 revolutionaries. The former royal palace was originally a medieval building, reworked and rebuilt several times, with a major reconstruction 1857-68 by architects Joseph-Louis Duc and Honore Daumet under Haussmann. The complex includes the Palais de Justice, the Sainte-Chapelle and the Conciergerie. Picture by Manuel Cohen
Unique Identifier
AR9640782
Type
Image
Purpose
Public
Size
4247px × 7087px
Photo Credit
Manuel Cohen / Art Resource, NY
Add to lightbox
Add to cart
Tags
1879
19th century
Architecture
ART
Berryer
building
COLOR IMAGE
colour image
Courtroom
EUROPE
EUROPEAN
FINE ARTS
France
French
Henri-Michel-Antoine Chapu
History
Ile de France
ILE DE LA CITE
ILE-DE-FRANCE
INDOORS
INSIDE
interior
JUDICIARY
Justice
Law
law courts
Monument
Neoclassical
Neo-Classicism
Palace
Palace of Justice
Palais de Justice
Palais de la Cite
PARIS
PARISIAN
Portrait
PORTRAITURE
Quai des Orfevres
SCULPTURAL DETAIL
Sculpture
Statue
VERTICAL
VESTIBULE
Western Europe
Western European