More About This Exhibition

Exhibition Images

"Framing a Century" begins with beautifully preserved works by three photographers of
architecture and landscape: the Englishman Roger Fenton (1819–1869), the preeminent
British photographer of the 1850s; Carleton Watkins (1829–1916), the consummate
photographer of the American West during the 1860s and 1870s, famed for his early
views of Yosemite; and the Frenchman Gustave Le Gray (1820–1884), who is now represented
in the Met's collection by more than forty photographs spanning his entire career, from
his early views of Fontainebleau Forest and medieval architecture to his famed seascapes
of the mid-1850s and his final pictures, made in Egypt.
The next section includes rare photographs by the inventor of paper photography, William Henry Fox Talbot
(1800–1877), whose work in the Metropolitan ranges from some of the first photographs ever made, predating
the announcement of photography, through iconic images that were included in Talbot's groundbreaking
photographically illustrated book The Pencil of Nature, to examples of the photogravure process
that consumed the latter part of his life.
Also in the second room of the exhibition are works by two masters of portraiture, Nadar (Gaspard-Félix
Tournachon, 1820–1910) in France and Julia Margaret Cameron (1815–1879) in England. Nadar, whose keen observation
of physiognomy and personality was honed as a caricaturist, was at his best when photographing his literary,
artistic, and left-wing political friends, including the writer Alexandre Dumas, the critic Théophile Gautier,
and the famous mime Charles Deburau. The subjects of Cameron's works in the exhibition include her friends—the
eminent scientist Sir John Herschel and the poet laureate Alfred Tennyson—as well as family members, neighbors,
and staff pressed into service as models in Cameron's biblical and literary tableaux.
The history, landscape, and streets of Paris and the French countryside are explored in works on view
by: édouard Baldus (1813–1889), whose images include historic monuments, the natural landscape, and the
chievements of modern engineers; Charles Marville (1816–1879), best known for photographs commissioned by
Baron Hausmann—the master urban planner for Napoleon III—that recorded the transformation of Paris from a
city of narrow streets and medieval buildings to one with grand boulevards and impressive public works that
still define the French capital; and Eugène Atget (1857–1927), an artist who spent three decades documenting
the look and feel of Paris and the surrounding region, working within a nineteenth-century tradition, nonetheless
celebrated by the Surrealists.
The exhibition concludes with the work of four artists who were significant in transforming photography
into a modern visual language. The exhibition's photographs by Man Ray (1890–1976), for example, will capture
the broad creative scope of his work in the 1920s and 1930s, including portraits of fellow artists Marcel
Duchamp and Jean Cocteau; documentation of his own ephemeral sculptures; and photographs that reveal his
dynamic experimentation with the plasticity of the medium through solarization, photograms, negative prints,
and film. Also included is work by pioneering and influential photojournalist Henri Cartier-Bresson (1908–2004);
Brassaï (1899–1984), the chronicler of Paris by night; and Walker Evans (1903–1975), best known for his
Depression-era photographs in the American South.
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