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
A British-born photographer, Taylor lived in Marseille and became a member of the Société Française de Photographie in 1860. Taking photographs in city parks and the surrounding countryside, as well as in Ariège and Seine-et-Oise, he often worked with the establishment G. Arosa et Cie in Saint-Cloud to produce his ink-based prints made from photographs according to the publisher’s unique process. This print is likely made from a shellac base, for Taylor wrote several articles for British and American photographic journals on a shellac printing process in 1866 and 1867. After printing, the images would be mounted onto a heavy card stock and sold to be collected in albums. Here, the subject, a dolmen, or Neolithic tomb, reflects 19th-century interest in distant history and early monuments.
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Gustave Le Gray — Chêne dans les rochers à Fontainebleau
Unknown — Saddle Rock
André Giroux (French, 1801–1879) — Untitled (Scene of Fontai
Gustave Le Gray — [Oak Tree and Rocks, Forest of Fontaineble
Andrew Joseph Russell — Skull Rock, (Granite) Sherman Statio
Timothy O'Sullivan — Slaughter Pen, Foot of Round Top, Getty
Achille Quinet — Forest and Rocks, Fontainebleau
Constant Alexandre Famin (French, 1827–1888) — Study of a Bi
Imprimerie photographique de Blanquart-Évrard, à Lille|Augus
Joseph Cundall|Philip Henry Delamotte — Fountains Abbey. Th
John Thomson|Lai Fong — [Path to Fangguangyan Monastery, Fuj
John Beasley Greene — Tombeau de la chrétienne. Vue du côté