
Milk Drop Coronet
<p>As a professor in Electrical Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dr. Harold Edgerton often claimed his photographic work was only an incidental result of scientific experimentation. Edgerton invented modern stroboscopic photography, which utilizes a rapid succession of light flashes in order to capture a quickly moving object. His graphic images—a bullet piercing a playing card, a football being kicked, a golfer's swing—gained popular acclaim as well, and were featured often in <em>Life</em> magazine throughout the 1940s. Edgerton began trying to photograph drops of milk in 1932, and in 1936 produced an image almost identical to the one here, but in black and white, of two milk drops colliding in a crown-like splash. He must have had an aesthetic as well as a scientific goal in mind, for he continued to experiment with this subject for two decades until he finally achieved visual clarity in vivid color.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1957
- Medium
- Dye imbibition print
- Dimensions
- Image: 46.7 × 33.9 cm (18 7/16 × 13 3/8 in.); Paper: 50.7 × 40.4 cm (20 × 15 15/16 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Harold Eugene Edgerton
Artist

Printmaking
Harold Eugene Edgerton was an American electrical engineer and photographer who pioneered the stroboscopic flash, a technology that enabled the capture of high-speed motion invisible to the human eye. Working from MIT, where he spent most of his career, Edgerton developed ultra-short duration electronic flashes that revealed the mechanics of movement across disciplines from ballistics to athletics to fluid dynamics. His photographs transformed the technical image into an aesthetic object, presenting bullets in flight, milk splashes, and hummingbird wings with formal precision and unexpected beauty. The work bridged experimental physics and visual art, establishing new possibilities for how light could be weaponized as an instrument of discovery.
Full artist profile →More
More by Harold Eugene Edgerton
Golf Club and Ball
1985 · Gelatin silver print
Untitled
1985 · Color instant print (Polaroid Polacolor)
Owl Landing #2
1974 · Internal dye diffusion transfer print
Owl
1974 · Internal dye diffusion transfer print
Bullet through Balloons
1973 · Gelatin silver print
Bullet through Candle Flame
1973 · Dye imbibition print
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Harold Eugene Edgerton
- Year
- 1957
- Medium
- Dye imbibition print
- Dimensions
- Image: 46.7 × 33.9 cm (18 7/16 × 13 3/8 in.); Paper: 50.7 × 40.4 cm (20 × 15 15/16 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1957-084944
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





