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 painter by trade, Le Gray took up photography in 1847 and became a master of light-filled landscapes and seascapes. His early portraits depict his social circle of artists and writers, including his friend and neighbor the playwright Cottinet. He is portrayed here as if in a reverie, perhaps composing a new play in his head. This effect is partly created by the low shooting angle and isolation of the subject in a corner between two bare walls, a rare and casual approach for the time. Posing subjects this way would become a standard ploy for the famed 20th-century photographer Irving Penn, although it is highly unlikely he ever saw this work.
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Loescher & Petsch — [Oskar Begas]
Louis-Rémy Robert — Alfred Thompson Gobert
George Gardner Rockwood — [John Frederick Kensett]
Emile Schweitzer — [Francois Adolphe Grison]
John and Charles Watkins — [George Dunlop Leslie]
John and Charles Watkins — [William Callow]
Gustave Le Gray — Portrait de Pitre-Chevalier
John and Charles Watkins — [Alfred Pizzey Newton]
Willem Frederik Vinkenbos — [Jozef Israels]
Paul Gavarni — Alfred de Musset
Nadar — Gioacchino Rossini
Louis-Adolphe Humbert de Molard — Self-Portrait