The Seine and the Eiffel Tower, Monochrome
The color version of this image carries the Seine's particular gray-green in the foreground and the iron-brown of the tower's paint above it — colors that identify each element specifically, that anchor the image in time and place. Remove them and what remains is a different photograph: not a color image made monochrome, but a set of tonal relationships that ask to be read on different terms.
In B&W the Seine becomes an abstract dark plane — a horizontal weight at the base of the composition. The tower's lattice, stripped of its warmth, reads as pure structure against the sky: diagonals, horizontals, the engineering problem made visible without the mediation of pigment. The embankment wall holds its own register, the stone carrying a gray that sits between the water's darkness and the sky's light. The boats that give the river its inhabited quality are present as shapes rather than colored objects.
This is the Pont d'Iéna view in the register of weight and contrast — the city arranged not as a color field but as tonal architecture.
