Étude de nuages
Gustave Le Gray, 1856–57
About this artwork
Gustave Le Gray's *Étude de nuages*Study of Clouds), created around 1856–57, captures the fleeting drama of the sky in a masterful albumen silver print from negatives. This 19th-century French photographer and educator revolutionized landscape imagery by isolating atmospheric elements like clouds, producing luminous, ethereal effects that rivaled paintings. Printed on a mount measuring 12 11/16 × 16 15/16 inches, the image itself spans 12 5/8 × 16 inches, showcasing the technical precision of early wet-collodion negatives. Le Gray, a key figure in photography's formative years, taught at Paris's École des Beaux-Arts and pushed the medium's limits. Albumen prints, coated with egg whites for sharp detail and warm tones, were the era's gold standard, but Le Gray innovated by combining multiple negatives—often printing a brighter sky over a dimmer seascape—to conquer exposure challenges. This "cloud study" exemplifies his Romantic pursuit of nature's sublime beauty, bridging photography with fine art. Now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Photographs Department through the 2012 bequest of Maurice B. Sendak, *Étude de nuages* highlights photography's rapid evolution from scientific novelty to artistic powerhouse, inviting viewers to ponder the infinite moods of the heavens.