Gustave Le Gray (1820 – 1884) has been called “the most important French photographer of the nineteenth century” because of his technical innovations in the still new medium of photography, his role as the teacher of other noted photographers, and the extraordinary imagination he brought to picture making.
Le Gray studied painting in the studio of Paul Delaroche, and made his first daguerreotypes by at least 1847. His real contributions—artistically and technically—however, came in the realm of paper photography, in which he first experimented in 1848. The first of his four treatises, published in 1850, boldly—and correctly—asserted that “the entire future of photography is on paper.”
Here is an amazing collection of portrait photos that Le Gray took from the mid-19th century. Most of them are celebrities and famous people.
An Italian street musician, 1856
Auguste Clésinger, sculpteur, 1848
Céline Cerf, muse of fifteen and a half years, 1848
Empress Eugénie (1826-1920), wife of Emperor Napoleon III, 1856
Empress Eugénie (1826-1920), wife of Emperor Napoleon III, 1856
Frédéric Buisson, composer and dandy, 1848
French author, historian and journalist Pierre-Michel-François Chevalier, 1853
French writer Alexandre Dumas, 1859
Gioachino Rossini, Italian composer, circa 1856
Giuseppe Garibaldi, Palermo, 1860
Gustave le Gray self-portrait with his Daguerreotype camera, 1847
Gustave Le Gray, 1854
Jean-Baptiste Gustave Le Gray (1820-1884) self-portrait, 1852
Lodoisch Crette Romet, ‘A Lesson of Gustave Le Gray in His Studio’, 1854
Louis-Napoléon, Prince President of the French Republic, 1852
Marguerite Palace, fiancée in mourning, 1848
Palmira Le Gray, 1848
Portrait of a man, 1856
Portrait of French painter and photographer Henri Le Secq, 1848
Portrait of French painter Hippolyte Flandrin, 1848
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