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
During the reign of Napoleon III (1852–70), Nadar cultivated an illustrious career as a writer, caricaturist, and, most notably, photographer, producing arresting portraits of his renowned friends and contemporaries. He was also an enthusiastic balloonist, an obsession that led him to construct the largest hot air balloon the world had seen and make the first aerial photographs in 1858. Viewing the Earth's surface from above, he wrote, "reduces all things to their relative proportions—to the Truth." Nadar's first flight aboard his balloon Géant (Giant) on October 4, 1863, was a great success. On the second launch, however, the balloon eventually crashed in Hanover, leaving Nadar with a fractured leg. This photograph of that launch establishes the sheer size of the balloon—which was made with 20,000 meters of silk and carried 80 passengers in a two-story basket—by juxtaposing it with the crowd of 200,000 who have come to watch it.
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[Nadar with His Wife, Ernestine, in a Balloon]
Portrait of Ernestine Nadar, the artist's wife, wearing fur
Champfleury (born Jules François Felix Fleury-Husson, French
[Standing Female Nude]
George Sand (born Amantine Lucile Aurore Dupin, French novel
Jean-François Millet
Gustave Doré
Jean-Francois Millet
Unknown — [Stereograph View of a Hot Air Balloon]
Jean Baptiste Oscar Mallitte — [Lady Canning on her Black Ar
Alexander Gardner — [Grand Army Review, Pennsylvania Avenue,
James Gardner — Battery A, Fourth U.S. Artillery, Robertson'
Timothy O'Sullivan — Culpeper, Virginia
Timothy O'Sullivan — Gettysburg, Pennsylvania
Gustave Le Gray — Mass, Camp de Châlons
John Reekie — Medical Supply Boat, Appomattox Landing, Virgi
Gustave Le Gray — Untitled
Alexander Gardner — President Lincoln on Battle-Field of Ant
Andrew Joseph Russell|Mathew B. Brady — [Artillery Camp, Cit
Timothy O'Sullivan — U.S. Military Telegraph Construction Co