Charnay, Claude-Joseph-Désiré (1828-1915), French explorer and photographer. An amateur archaeologist, Charnay moved to America in his youth and, inspired by the explorations of John Lloyd Stephens, went to photograph ancient ruins at Mitla, Palenque Izamal, Chichén Itzá, and Uxmal in the Yucatán. The resulting portfolio, Cités et ruines américaines (1862) contained 49 wet-plate photographs, taken with great difficulty in the hot climate. He later travelled extensively in South America, Indonesia, and Australia, producing both archaeological and ethnographic photographs. He returned to the Yucatán in 1880-2 and published Anciennes Villes du Nouveau Monde (1885), illustrated with wood engravings from his photographs. Charnay is strongly represented at the Canadian Architectural Centre in Montreal.
— Lisa Ann Lavender
Bibliography
- Davis, K. F., Désiré Charnay: Expeditionary Photographer (1981)





