Rene Pauli Explained

René Pauli
Birth Date:1935
Birth Place:Bern, Switzerland
Death Date:1999
Death Place:San Francisco, California
Known For:Photography and tri-color carbon prints

René Pauli (1935–1999) was a Swiss-American artist known for his original photographs and tri-color carbon print making process.[1] His tri-color carbon prints of original nature photographs were sold in several U.S. photography galleries,[2] featured by an Eastman Kodak exhibition and by the Sierra Club and are included in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art,[3] the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston,[4] and the Polk Museum of Art.[5] René revived and perfected the carbon printing process independently in a small apartment in San Francisco by engineering all hand built machines, even creating his own paper mats. His tri-color carbon prints were noted for their unmatched color, quality and detail, bas-relief effect, and archival permanence, estimated to last virtually unchanged for many hundreds of years.[6] [7]

Notes and References

  1. News: René Pauli - Scott Chimileski. 2017-07-22.
  2. Web site: View Inventory. www.agallery.com. 2017-07-22.
  3. Web site: Metropolitan Museum of Art - Collections: Gambel Oak and Junipers . Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  4. Web site: Search the Collection The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. www.mfah.org. 2017-07-22.
  5. Web site: Artists in Our Collection. polkmuseumofart.org. en-US. 2017-07-22.
  6. News: Pace. Bob. KEEPING PACE - The Dye Transfer Problem is Almost Solved. June 1994.
  7. Web site: A Gallery for Fine Photography, questions and answers about photography>. www.agallery.com. 2017-07-22.