Mediterranean with Mount Agde
Gustave Le Gray, 1857
About this artwork
**Mediterranean with Mountde**, captured by Gustave Le Gray in1857, exemplifies the golden age of early photography. Le Gray, a pioneering French and a leader in the Romantic movement, ventured to the Mediterranean coast near Agde, France, to document the sublime interplay of sea and sky. This albumen silver print, measuring 31.8 x 40.9 cm, is housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Photographs Department, acquired through the Joseph Pulitzer Bequest in 1996. What makes this seascape revolutionary is Le Gray's innovative technique: printing from *two glass negatives*—one exposing the luminous sea and foreground, the other capturing the fleeting drama of clouds. At a time when single exposures struggled to balance bright skies with darker waters, this composite method elevated photography from mere documentation to fine art, rivaling paintings by artists like Turner. The result is a poetic harmony of textured waves, distant Mount Agde, and ethereal clouds, tagged simply as "Seascapes|Clouds." Le Gray's work bridged painting and photography, influencing generations and affirming the medium's artistic potential in the 1850s, when it was still proving itself in museums and salons. Visitors, gaze upon this print and feel the timeless allure of the sea's vastness!