Born in
France, Marchand studied under
Auguste Rodin. In 1903, he and his wife Clothilde, also an artist, emigrated to the
United States. Marchand began working as a diorama artist at the
New York State Museum. His work on the museum's
Iroquois dioramas, dedicated in 1918, earned him recognition. In 1925, Marchand and his family moved to
Buffalo, New York, where he and his sons Paul and George were to construct dioramas for the
Buffalo Museum of Science. Though much of the work the Marchands created there is no longer on display, some can still be seen, particularly in the museum's Hall of Wildflowers. ==Scandal==