Jean-Baptiste Henri Durand-Brager was born at
Dol in
Brittany in 1814. He studied under
Gudin and
Eugène Isabey. He was a naval officer who rose to the rank of captain. In 1840, he accompanied the fleet which repatriated
Napoleon's remains from
St. Helena, and the island afforded him subjects for various paintings. He spent much of his time travelling: He went to
Buenos Aires with the squadron,
Montevideo in 1841–42 aboard a French warship, and explored Uruguay and Brazil; he accompanied the expeditions to
Tangiers and
Mogador, and to Madagascar. He painted views of the places he visited, and also naval combats and sea-pieces. In the 1850s, Durand-Brager was in the
Crimea during the
war with Russia, where he turned his hand to photography as well as painting. He was one of about fifteen photographers, including
Felice Beato,
Roger Fenton and
James Robertson, who photographed soldiers, barracks, camp life and battlefields and were the first to record a major war on film. Later, he returned to Constantinople where he made photographs of the landscape, monuments and the people. He was a versatile painter, producing naval scenes, genre works,
costumbrismo works, landscapes and works with Orientalist themes. There are several of his works in the
galleries of Versailles. Durand-Brager died in 1879. == Gallery ==