Little biographical information exists on Cambon's early years, other than that he would have been active as an
aquarelle and sepia artist before studying with
Pierre-Luc Charles Ciceri. At Ciceri's workshop Cambon made acquaintance with Humanité-René Philastre, who would become his first long-term associate. '' (1841) for
Les Burgraves, Act II (première production, 1843)|upright=1.3 As a stage design for a "Salon" at the
Bibliothèque-Musée de l'Opéra testifies, Philastre and Cambon started collaborating in 1824 at the latest. From that time until 1848, Philastre and Cambon accepted numerous joint commissions for theatrical interior decorations and stage designs. Thus, they decorated the interiors of venues in Angoulême, Antwerp, Beaune, Brest, Choiseul, Dijon, Douai, Ghent, Lille, Lyon, Paris and Rouen, often providing complete machineries as well. Philastre and Cambon also designed productions – or portions thereof, as was customary back then – for Paris (
Académie Royale de Musique,
Ambigu,
Bouffes-Parisiens,
Cirque Olympique,
Comédie-Française,
Délassements-Comiques,
Folies-Dramatiques,
Porte Saint-Martin), Antwerp (
Théâtre Royal Français), Barcelona (
Liceu) and Ghent (
Grand Théâtre) that created the blueprint for
grand opéra and romantic scenography in Europe. Notable stagings to which Philastre and Cambon contributed are the world premieres of Auber's
Gustave III, ou Le bal masque (1833), Berlioz'
Benvenuto Cellini (1838), Donizetti's
La favorite (1840), Halévy's
La juive (1835), and Hugo's
Les Burgraves (1843). Cambon separated from Philastre in 1848 as the latter emigrated to Spain. He found a new associate in an extremely talented student, Joseph Thierry, with whom Cambon would design epoch-making productions for the
Châtelet,
Opéra,
Opéra-Comique,
Théâtre-Historique, and
Théâtre-Lyrique in Paris. Examples of Cambon and Thierry's joint oeuvre include the world premieres of Berlioz'
Les Troyens à Carthage (1863), Gounod's
Faust (1859) and
La reine de Saba (1862), Meyerbeer's
Le prophète (1849) and ''
L'Africaine'' (1865), Verdi's
Jérusalem (1847) and
Don Carlos (1867), and Wagner's
Tannhäuser (Parisian version, 1861). After Thierry's premature death, in 1866, Cambon continued to work in full independence for venues in Cairo (
Khedivial Opera) and Paris (
Odéon,
Opéra and Vaudeville), decorating a.o. the world premieres of Delibes'
Coppélia (1870) and of Thomas'
Hamlet (1868), next to a large number of the
Palais Garnier's first-generation productions (a.o.
Don Giovanni,
Faust,
La favorite,
Guillaume Tell,
Hamlet,
Les Huguenots, ''Jeanne d'Arc
and La juive''). Cambon was to co-design the premiere of Verdi's
Aida (1871), but dropped out of the production due to unknown circumstances. Cambon taught many pupils at his scenic studio at 3 rue Neuve-Samson (currently rue Léon-Jouhaux, Xme Arrondissement). Students of note are Antoine Lavastre and
Eugène Louis Carpezat (his official successors), Chéret, Jean-Émile Daran, Célestin-François-Louis Gosse, Eugène Lacoste, Jules-Frédéric Le Goff, Francesc Soler Rovirosa, and
Angelo II Quaglio. Cambon was named Chevalier de la
Légion d'honneur in 1869. He was a friend of
Prosper Mérimée and
Stendhal. Cambon's funeral service at Saint-Denis-du-Sacrement and subsequent burial at
Montmartre Cemetery were reportedly attended by
Camille du Locle,
Émile Perrin and Édouard Thierry, as well as by the complete crew of the Opéra. == Style ==