Mountain Portraits
Aiguilles Rouges d'Arolla History of the ascent of an emblematic summit
The Valais Alps abound with gigantic, sublime mountains. But in the heart of this realm of rock and ice, nature has fashioned a massif without equal. Here, I present a portrait of the Aiguilles Rouges d'Arolla , a celestial journey to the gates of the sublime. Portrait of the Aiguilles Rouges d'Arolla : the birth of a mountain ... Read more
Read the article
Recent articles

Photo framing, Decoration projects
Decoration of a renovated mountain chalet style apartment
Three large format panoramic mountain photos were selected to bring a design touch to the authentic decoration of this renovated apartment in the Neuchâtel region.

Photo framing, Decoration projects, Thomas Crauwelsprints photos
Decoration of a commercial property
The image of a company is appreciated from the first seconds. So making your lobby warmer and more comfortable is essential. Choosing to display large format mountain photographs is a way to share authentic values and aesthetic pleasure with your visitors.

History of the Alps
The Alps as a laboratory I Initial research
The (high) mountains are an environment that can quickly become hostile to human presence: it's not possible to live in a world of rock and ice. Moreover, physical confrontation with the mountain involves physical effort and fatigue that can prove disabling, particularly at altitude. These facts have prompted a number of scientists and mountaineers to look into the matter, turning the Alps into a laboratory for experimentation. This non-exhaustive overview is followed by a second chapter focusing more specifically on the figure of Angelo Mosso, a physician, physiologist and ...

History of the Alps
The Alps as a laboratory II ANGELO MOSSO
Angelo Mosso (1846-1910) was an Italian physician, physiologist and mountaineer. He was interested in the Alps and their impact, not physical but physiological, on the human body. The Alps were seen as the ideal place to answer some of the burning questions about the human body at the end of the century, such as how the nerves react to changes in environment, or how energy is expended and fatigue caused in experiments. So we're a long way from the Alps as playground of Europe, as Leslie Stephen put it. Mosso noted that the effects of fatigue are stronger in the mountains, but last ...

History of the Alps
GABRIEL LOPPE French painter, photographer and mountaineer
Gabriel Loppé (1825-1913) was a French painter, photographer and mountaineer. Although he is little known to the general public today, he enjoyed considerable success during his lifetime. However, there are few studies of his work. Loppé was a painter-mountaineer, i.e. a painter and mountaineer who put art above all else: mountain outings were subordinated to artistic practice. First steps in painting Loppé's decision to become a landscape painter was prompted by the sight of two painters working from summit on Pic Saint-Loup. This vocation would be facilitated by his stays ...

History of the Alps
JOSEPH MALLORD WILLIAM TURNER the best-known English painter of the 18th century
Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775-1851) is without doubt the best-known English painter of the 18th century. Many exhibitions are still devoted to him today. He is known as one of the leading painters of the aesthetic of the sublime and for his great talent, particularly in watercolor. Although his strokes are forced, he is also considered the precursor of Impressionism, and even of abstract art. Turner's first trip to Switzerland Turner came from a modest background: his father was a barber. He was spotted at an early age: he entered the Royal Academy of Painting at the tender age of 14. ...