Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Initially trained as a painter, Édouard-Denis Baldus turned to photography in the late 1840s and quickly gained recognition. In 1851 the French government selected him as one of five photographers to document the nation’s architectural heritage, a survey known as the Missions Héliographiques. The images Baldus produced for the project exhibited such technical prowess that he won support for another project, Les villes de France photographiée s, designed to revive interest in the nation’s Roman and medieval history. During the summer of 1854, Baldus traveled in the Auvergne region of central France, making pictures that emphasize the drama of the natural landscape, such as this river scene. Although the large-format waxed paper negatives he employed were never intended to be exhibited, they remain compelling objects that offer up a startling range of tones.
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William Henry Fox Talbot (British, 1800–1877) — A Mountain R
Dr. Samuel A. Bemis
American, 1793-1881 — Untitled (Notch Ho
Edouard Baldus — Vienne, St. Jean
Marie-Charles-Isidore Choiselat|Stanislas Ratel — [Landscape
Maxime Du Camp — Jardin de l'hotel du Nil
David Octavius Hill|Robert Adamson|Hill and Adamson — Burns
William Henry Fox Talbot — A Mountain Rivulet which Flows at
Captain Horatio Ross (British, 1801–1886) — River Landscape,
Rodolphe Bresdin (French, 1822–1885) — The Mountain Stream
Frank Chauvassaignes (French) — Landscape with Seated Figure
Victor Prout (British, 1835–1877) — Iffley Mill
Charles Nègre — Grasse