Antoine Sonrel


Antoine Sonrel was an illustrator, engraver, and photographer in Switzerland and Boston, Massachusetts, in the 19th century. He moved from Neuchâtel to the United States around the late 1840s, and was affiliated with Louis Agassiz throughout his career. As a photographer he created numerous carte de visite portraits in the 1860s and 1870s; subjects included his friend Agassiz, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr., Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., Abbott Lawrence Rotch, and sculptor Anne Whitney.

Biography

Around the 1830s in Neuchâtel, Sonrel began creating scientific illustrations for Louis Agassiz. "Draftsmen of superior talent, trained... to the greatest accuracy — Weber, Dinkel, and Sonrel — were constantly in employ at a regular salary.... At the suggestion of Agassiz an extensive lithographic establishment was created in Neuchatel." Agassiz wrote in 1857: "I esteem myself happy to have been able to secure the continued assistance of my old friend, Mr. A. Sonrel, in drawing the zoological figures of my work. More than twenty years ago, he began to make illustrations for my European works ; and ever since he has been engaged, with short interruptions, in executing drawings for me."
In the United States, Sonrel lived in Boston on Acorn Street in Beacon Hill, Tremont Street, and in Woburn, Massachusetts. He kept a studio in Boston at 46 School Street and Washington Street. Sonrel exhibited lithographs in the 1851 World's Fair in London and in the 1853 exhibition of the Massachusetts Charitable Mechanic Association.

Works illustrated by Sonrel

;Works by Sonrel