And in fact you even can't make standard calibration with vcgt [Video Card Gamma Table], nor create a profile, there's simlply no such option in MacOS for Macbook Pro 14/16 and Studio displays.
Apple has gone out of their way to make the latest MacBook Pro XDR and Studio Displays very unfriendly to users that want or need to calibrate their display from time to time. There are options for calibrating and for creating profiles, Apple has just hidden them or made them inconvenient for users. What Apple offers are two pretty ridiculous options. One is a digital Stone Age method and the other resembles a science fair project.
The primitive calibration method is pretty much the same visual comparison method that has been around forever — Apple's
Display Calibrator Assistant. This uses your eyes as the measurement device and your visual cortex for comparisons with a visual reference displayed on the screen as the standard. If Display Calibrator Assistant isn't readily accessible thru System Preferences › Displays › Color › Calibrate, it's because Apple decided to hide it from you in Macintosh HD › System › Library › ColorSync ›
Calibrators where it continues to live. It functions pretty much the way it has for decades and is usually best avoided. The options available will vary somewhat depending on what you're calibrating (computer/ display/ macOS) but will look
something like this. It's not how you'd normally want to calibrate any respectable display for use in serious color editing.
The science fair method provided by Apple to "fine-tune the calibration" (white point and luminance only) for the
Apple Studio Display or
Liquid Retina XDR MacBook Pro is to download QuickTime movie test patterns from Apple's AVFoundation website for developers. Then
"use your in-house spectroradiometer to measure" and then manually enter the white point x/y and luminance readings measured and target values desired into boxes as shown in the links. Not a real user friendly method for those wishing to calibrate their display occasionally.
There are other software calibration options like DisplayCal. To change or confirm the profile in use, you may need to use
ColorSync Utility which would look
like this.
Of course, all of the above only matters if you want or need to calibrate your display. If that is of little or no concern, then you can ignore the calibration limitations and inconveniences imposed by Apple and happily enjoy your viewing with an excellent display that was well calibrated at the factory.