Paris Photographie was a periodical published by Paul Nadar from 1891 to 1894. Along with articles about the latest in photography technology, each issue includes a tipped in héliogravure, and a plate consisting of reproductions of photographs taken by Paul Nadar, entitled: Nadar-actualité. The son of celebrated photographer Félix Tournachon Nadar, Paul Nadar became manager of his father’s Paris studio on the Rue d’Anjou in 1874. Their rocky relationship resulted in an estrangement around 1885, although the following year the father and son collaborated on what is believed by scholars to be the first photo-interview. The son was the photographer and the father the interviewer; their subject was 101-year old chemist and color theorist Michel-Eugène Chevreul. That same year, Paul Nadar began to experiment with photographing from a hot-air balloon and presented his results at the Société Française de la Photographie. An innovative experimenter throughout his career, Paul Nadar investigated artificial lighting and patented a projection system for animating still pictures; in 1893 he became Eastman Kodak’s agent in France. [1]
Oliver, Barret, and Walter B. Woodbury. A History of the Woodburytype: The First Successful Photomechanical Printing Process and Walter Bentley Woodbury. Nevada City, Calif: Carl Mautz Pub, 2007. plate 14.
[1] source: Getty Museum web site