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
Eugène Cuvelier was a landscape painter as well as a photographer. During the 1850s and 1860s, he photographed in an number of forests near Paris. He was also associated with the Barbizon painters, a group working in the village of Barbizon that advocated the direct study of nature. This exquisite snow scene exemplifies Cuvelier's distinguished and influential landscape work. The artist took advantage of the inherent softness of his photographic process to create an atmospheric rendering of a winter scene with a curving pathway that draws the viewer into the dense, barely defined background of foliage. Many of the trees Cuvelier recorded disappeared soon after the photographs were taken.
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Eugène Cuvelier — [Fontainebleau Forest]
James Sinclair, 14th Earl of Caithness (British, 1821–1881)
Gustave Le Gray (French, 1820–1884) — Pathway in the Forest
Unknown|Imprimerie photographique de Blanquart-Évrard, à Lil
Untitled (Landscape)
Charles Conway — Winter
Auguste Louis Lepère (French, 1849–1918) — Le Bas Bréau
William James Stillman (American, 1828–1901) — Untitled (Woo
Thomas Davies — Wood-scene, Norton, Cheshire
John R. Edis (British) — Durham Cathedral
Eugène Cuvelier — Untitled
William Harrison — Forêt de Fontainebleau