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Original fileGárgola en Notre-Dame
A side-profile view of a weathered stone chimera sculpture featuring a goat-like face, curled horns, and a beard, resting its hand on a stone ledge. The creature looks out over an aerial view of Paris, with the river Seine curving through the architecture below and the Eiffel Tower visible on the horizon. The image is rendered in a sepia-toned, high-contrast style that emphasizes the texture of the stone against the expansive, hazy urban backdrop.
This sculpture is part of the 19th-century Neo-Gothic restoration of Notre-Dame de Paris led by Eugène Viollet-le-Duc, who introduced these chimeras as decorative elements inspired by medieval gargoyles rather than original 13th-century features.
Eugène Viollet-le-Duc
The architect responsible for the 19th-century restoration and the inclusion of these specific decorative chimeras.
AI AI-cataloged fields generated by gemini-3.1-flash-lite-preview on April 20, 2026. Getty identifiers are AI-inferred and may require verification.