Not currently on view
In the collection of Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland · as of July 2026
FROM THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART’S CATALOG
Almost all early photographers relied on daylight as their sole lighting source. Adam-Salomon’s special lighting techniques yielded a rich tonal range and cast his sitters’ features into relief. A ground-glass ceiling in his studio offered an even, overall light that he accented with side light from glass wall areas that could be covered or filtered by curtains. Initially a sculptor, Adam-Salomon borrowed heavily from the conventions of portrait painting, aggrandizing his subjects by setting them amid luxurious objects and grand architectural features that may or may not have related to their lives. He produced such elegant, large prints in his Parisian portrait studio that he was able to charge four times more than his most able competitors.
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John and Charles Watkins — [Unknown Subject]
Mathew B. Brady — Edward Everett
David Octavius Hill|Robert Adamson|Hill and Adamson — Alexa
John and Charles Watkins — [Frederick Richard Pickersgill]
David Octavius Hill|Robert Adamson|Hill and Adamson — Sir W
Mathew Brady (American, 1823–1896) — Prosper M. Wetmore
John and Charles Watkins — [Edward Duncan]
Albert Sands Southworth|Josiah Johnson Hawes|Southworth and
Roger Fenton — Lieutenant General Sir H.J.W. Bentinck, K.C.B
John and Charles Watkins|Baron Charles Marochetti — [Baron C
Albert Sands Southworth|Josiah Johnson Hawes|Southworth and
Etienne Carjat — Jean Baptiste Camille Corot