Jules David | |
|---|---|
Back of acarte de visite photograph | |
| Born | Jules David-Cavaz (1848-04-16)16 April 1848 Pinsot, France |
| Died | 8 October 1923(1923-10-08) (aged 75) Levallois-Perret, France |
| Occupation | Photographer |
Jules David, alsoJules David-Cavaz[1] (16 April 1848 – 8 October 1923), was a French photographer. In France, he was one of the first professional photographers to specialize in school photography. With his specialty, he built up an international career, often returning to schools, institutions and companies that he had worked with previously. Based inLevallois-Perret near Paris, he worked throughout Europe, and beyond, for almost forty years, traveling as far as Norway, Russia, Greece and Brazil.
Jules David-Cavaz was born the son of Jean David-Cavaz and Françoise Capitant in the hamlet of Charvin, near the village ofPinsot in theIsère department of South-Eastern France. His parents werepropriétaires, land-owning farmers, so his family was probably not entirely poor.[2]
Little is known about the first 20 years of his life. Nor do we know where he learned his photographic skills. In 1867, nineteen years old, he worked as an independent "group photographer" (photographe des groupes). In 1869 he was working with the photographer Claude Bretagne (1824–1880) inLeuven, Belgium.[3] In 1870–1871 he served in the French army during theFranco-Prussian War.[2] He left the army in August 1871 as asergeant major. He was a recipient of the FrenchMédaille militaire.
In 1873 David opened, together with Bretagne, a photo studio at the rue Gravel 54 in Levallois-Perret. The studio advertised specifically with "school photographs" (photographies des écoles), whereby schools included secondary schools, boarding schools, teacher training colleges and military academies. The association with Bretagne ended after two or three years, in 1875 or 1876, after which David set up his own studio at the rue Gravel 50. Levallois-Perret was to remain his home base for the rest of his life. After a short stay at the rue Trézel 19, in 1879 he moved to rue des Courcelles 90. In 1897 he won a bronze medal at theBrussels International Exposition.[4] From 1902 to 1910 he lived in the Rue Rivay in Levallois-Perret.[2]
On 8 October 1874 Jules David married Marie Cécile Mathilde Daman (1851-1929)[5] in Leuven, Belgium, where his wife was born.[6][7] There are indications that David became a relatively wealthy man and that he was involved in philanthropy. AfterWorld War I he volunteered to pay for a monument commemorating the dead in his birthplace Pinsot. He also donated a large sum to the local school, which the pupils then decided to devote to the rebuilding of the destroyed school inManicamp, Northern France.[8]
David died, aged 75, on 8 October 1923 in his home in the rue Président Wilson 90. He was survived by his wife Marie Cécile Mathilde Daman.[7]

David's work differs from that of the numerous traveling photographers of the late 19th century. Photography was still a relatively new discipline and in some regions of Europe few photo studios existed. Travelling photographers filled the gap, advertising their services wherever they went. Generally, portrait photography was all they had on offer. This was not the case with Jules David who carefully prepared his travels and almost exclusively worked with clients who wanted more than a simple portrait. His preferred clients were educational institutions of the bourgeoisie, among them military schools and boarding schools, where French was often the language of instruction.
As a rule, he would take a series of photographs of the building and its interior, he would then prepare a number of carefully composed group portraits of teachers and students, often complemented with 'action' photographs of students taking classes or involved in leisure activities. He then finished the production in his studio in Levallois.[9] The finished product, often a luxury album bound in linen or red leather with imprints in gold, was sent free of charge to the head of the institution after which directors, teachers, students or employees would choose the images they wanted a copy of.[10]
The demand for this type of photographs diminished towards the end of the century. There was more competition from local photographers who were able to provide schools with simpler – and thus cheaper – class photographs. The era of technical challenges and carefully prepared compositions was over. David ended his international career shortly after 1910, after which he exclusively worked in France. With his associate Edmond Vallois he ran a photo studio at the rue de Rennes[11] in Paris.[12] Many of hisnegatives on glass were sold to the then flourishing picturepostcard industry, which after his retirement remained an important source of income for his successor Vallois.
Jules David worked in France as a photographer specialized in school photography from 1867 until around 1915. The majority of his clients were schools and Catholic institutions. Judging by the number of photographs of Parissixth-form colleges (lycées), quite a few of them made use of his services. However, his reputation in France was not limited to 'school photography', as can be deducted from the prestigious commission to portray the French presidentJules Grévy and his military staff in the garden of theÉlysée Palace. Other well-known people were photographed by David: a photograph ofGustave Eiffel with his wife and children shows them relaxing in their garden in Levallois-Perret. His work in France continued after 1875, even when increasingly spending time abroad.

The first country outside France where David received commissions was Belgium. In 1874, while still associated with Claude Bretagne, he worked inAntwerp andVerviers.[13] Perhaps not entirely accidental, one of his last recorded trips abroad in 1911 was also to Verviers. An important commission, possibly given to him by thebishop of Namur, mgr.Théodore-Joseph Gravez, led in 1878 to the publication of the leather-bound albumL'Episcopat Belge 1878, which included portraits of all Belgian bishops, their cathedrals and their episcopal palaces. He must have returned to the country at least fourteen times, each time taking commissions from more than one client.
In the Netherlands, professional school photography was introduced by Jules David in the school year 1879–1880. Between 1879 and 1908 he visited the country at least twenty times. As in France and Belgium, his main clients were Catholic institutions, notablyJesuit andUrsuline boarding schools. However, his best client in the Netherlands was theRoyal Naval College inDen Helder, which he visited eight times between 1883 and 1905. Other favoured clients wereRolduc, a Catholic boarding school for boys (6 commissions) and the Episcopal College St. Joseph inWeert (5 commissions).[14]

In Britain and Ireland, David was employed by the military. InYork he photographed the2nd Dragoon Guards (Queen's Bays) in 1899 (an album with 34 photographs). He also worked at theRoyal Military College, Sandhurst, as well as in theLoreto Convent inGibraltar. InLimerick, Ireland, he photographed the 9th Field Battery of theRoyal Artillery in the courtyard of the Mulgrave Street barracks in 1898.
In Scandinavia, he counted many schools among his clients, as well as military institutions and private businesses. He visited Denmark at least once but only photographs of schools inCopenhagen are recorded (1889/90).[15] In Norway the emphasis lay on school photography, although he also had firemen posing in front of his camera, as well as workers at an arms manufacturer (1890, 1892, 1893/94, 1895, 1898, 1899, 1903 and 1908).[16] In Sweden his clients consisted of shipbuilders, a paper factory and a railway company, as well as schools and military institutions, including an equestrian portrait ofPrince Carl, Duke of Västergötland (1892, 1894, 1900, 1901 and at least once between 1905 and 1910).[17] In Finland, David took photographs of the various infantry battalions of theArmy of the Grand Duchy of Finland (1880s and 1890s). The Finnish revolutionary leaderJohan Kock was photographed by David while in Paris.[18]

In 1878 David received a prestigious commission from theHoly See. It resulted inLe Vatican 1878, another luxury album with twentydouble-mounted photographs of the new popeLeo XIII, his closest associates, thePapal Swiss Guard and various locations in theVatican. A copy of this album with a dedication was presented to emperorAlexander II of Russia. There is only one other photograph, taken inTurin in 1895/96, to testify of David's presence in Italy.
In Spain, on the contrary, numerous visits are recorded between 1878 and 1909, including some return visits to clients, as was the case with the railway company Ferrocarriles Andaluces inMalaga in 1895, 1903, 1907 and 1908. Other clients included Catholic (and Protestant) schools, technical schools, military and naval schools, factories and an observatory. Between 1881 and 1905 he visitedGalicia at least seven times, where over ninety photographs are catalogued.[19] In 1890 he worked inGran Canaria.[20]
David visited Portugal at least twice. In 1887/88 he took photographs at theUniversity of Coimbra. A series of photographs of the Jesuit boarding school Colégio Jesus Maria José inLisbon is undated but must have been taken prior to October 1910, when the school was closed down as a result of thePortuguese Revolution.[21] Only one visit to Greece is recorded.
David's busy schedule took him to every corner of Europe, and beyond. In Central and Eastern Europe he visited institutions and private enterprises in Poland, Moravia, Austria, Croatia, Hungary and Russia. His furthest journey, as far as we know, took him to Brazil in 1906 where he spent several weeks taking photographs at the Colégio Militar inRio de Janeiro, the Colégio Notre-Dame de Sion inPetrópolis, and theSão Paulo Railway aroundSão Paulo.[22][23]