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Eugène Atget

Eugène Atget (French: [adʒɛ]; 12 February 1857 – 4 August 1927) was a French flâneur[1] and a pioneer of documentary photography, noted for his determination to document all of the architecture and street scenes of Paris before their disappearance to modernization.[1] Most of his photographs were first published by Berenice Abbott after his death.[2] Though he sold his work to artists and craftspeople, and became an inspiration for the surrealists, he did not live to see the wide acclaim his work would eventually receive.[2]

Eugène Atget
Atget, c. 1890
Born
Jean-Eugène-Auguste Atget

(1857-02-12)12 February 1857
Died4 August 1927(1927-08-04) (aged 70)
Paris, France
Known forphotography
SpouseValentine Delafosse Compagnon
Organ Grinder (1898)

Biography edit

 
Atget's birthplace in Libourne

Early years edit

Jean-Eugène-Auguste Atget was born 12 February 1857 in Libourne. His father, carriage builder Jean-Eugène Atget, died in 1862, and his mother, Clara-Adeline Atget née Hourlier died shortly after; he was an orphan at age seven. He was brought up by his maternal grandparents in Bordeaux and after finishing secondary education joined the merchant navy.[3][4]

Moving to Paris edit

Atget moved to Paris in 1878. He failed the entrance exam for acting class but was admitted when he had a second try. Because he was drafted for military service he could attend class only part-time, and he was expelled from drama school.[3][4]

Still living in Paris,[5] he became an actor with a travelling group, performing in the Paris suburbs and the provinces. He met actress Valentine Delafosse Compagnon, who became his companion until her death. He gave up acting because of an infection of his vocal cords in 1887, moved to the provinces and took up painting without success. When he was thirty he made his first photographs, of Amiens and Beauvais, which date from 1888.[3][4]

Photography and documents for artists edit

In 1890, Atget moved back to Paris[6] and became a professional photographer, supplying documents for artists:[7] studies for painters, architects, and stage designers.[3][4]

Starting in 1898, institutions such as the Musée Carnavalet and the Bibliothèque historique de la ville de Paris bought his photographs. The latter commissioned him ca. 1906 to systematically photograph old buildings in Paris. In 1899 he moved to Montparnasse.[3][8]

While being a photographer Atget still called himself an actor, giving lectures and readings.[3]

During World War I Atget temporarily stored his archives in his basement for safekeeping and almost completely gave up photography. Valentine's son Léon was killed at the front.[3]

In 1920–21, he sold thousands of his negatives to institutions. Financially independent, he took up photographing the parks of Versailles, Saint-Cloud and Sceaux and produced a series of photographs of prostitutes.[3]

Later years and creative heritage edit

Berenice Abbott, while working with Man Ray, visited Atget in 1925, bought some of his photographs, and tried to interest other artists in his work.[3] She continued to promote Atget through various articles, exhibitions and books, and sold her Atget collection to the Museum of Modern Art in 1968.[9]

In 1926, Atget's partner Valentine died,[3] and before he saw the full-face and profile portraits that Abbott took of him in 1927, showing him “slightly stooped…tired, sad, remote, appealing”,[10] Atget died on 4 August in 1927, in Paris.[3][4]

Atget and biographical myth edit

At the moment, not many reliable facts from Atget’s life are known. It is believed that Atget was poor, while at the same time, there is an assumption that the photographer’s cramped financial circumstances are a myth established by later researchers in attempts to create the image of a romantic artist.[11] In his research, John Szarkowski[12] cited a fragment of Atget’s correspondence with Paul Leon, a professor at the Collège de France, an employee of the Commission on Historical Monuments and one of the top officials of the French Ministry of Culture (French), from which it follows that they sold 2,600 negatives for 10,000 francs. This is one of the largest, but not the only lifetime sales of Atget.

Photographic practice edit

 
Avenue des Gobelins (1927)

The beginning of photography and photography of Paris edit

Atget took up photography in the late 1880s, around the time that photography was experiencing unprecedented expansion in both commercial and amateur fields.[13]

Atget photographed Paris with a large-format wooden bellows camera with a rapid rectilinear lens, an instrument that was fairly current when he took it up, but which he continued to use even when hand-held and more efficient large-format cameras became available. The optical vignetting often seen at some corners of his photographs is due to his having repositioned the lens relative to the plate on the camera—exploiting one of the features of bellows view cameras as a way to correct perspective and control perspective and keep vertical forms straight. The negatives show four small clear rebates (printing black) where clips held the glass in the plate-holder during exposure. The glass plates were 180×240mm Bande Bleue (Blue Ribbon) brand with a general purpose gelatin-silver emulsion,[14] fairly slow, that necessitated quite long exposures, resulting in the blurring of moving subjects seen in some of his pictures.[15] Interest in Atget's work has prompted the recent scientific analysis of Atget's negatives and prints in Parisian collections[16] and in the Philadelphia Museum of Art.[17]

Specifics of the technique edit

In Intérieurs Parisiens, a series of photographs he took for the Bibliotéque Nationale, he included a view of his own simple darkroom with trays for processing negatives and prints, a safelight, and printing frames. After taking a photograph, Atget would develop, wash, and fix his negative, then assign the negative to one of his filing categories with the next consecutive number that he would write the negative number in graphite on the verso of the negative and also scratch it into the emulsion. He contact-printed his negatives onto pre-sensitized, commercially available printing-out papers;[15][14] albumen paper, gelatin-silver printing-out paper, or two types of matte albumen paper that he used mainly after WW1.[16] The negative was clamped into a printing frame under glass and against a sheet of albumen photographic printing out paper,[18] which was left out in the sun to expose. The frame permitted inspection of the print until a satisfactory exposure was achieved, then Atget washed, fixed and toned his print with gold toner, as was the standard practice when he took up photography.[17]

Atget did not use an enlarger, and all of his prints are the same size as their negatives. Prints would be numbered and labelled on their backs in pencil then inserted by the corners into four slits cut in each page of albums. Additional albums were assembled based on a specific themes that might be of interest to his clients, and separate from series or chronology.[15]

Features and specifics of photographic practice edit

One of the main issues related to Atget’s work is the nature and specificity of his legacy. Some researchers consider him, first of all, the author of romantic Parisian views.[19] Other researchers believe that the size of the archive is important in assessing his work—the entire corpus of 10 thousand photographs, and not just individual photographs.[11][20] It is believed that the meaning of his activity is not only in the creation of individual images, but also in the formation of a sequential series of images.[21] In this case, it is important to have an exceptional number of photographs (about 10 thousand), as well as the use of a systematic archival principle.[22] The idea of a work as a community was used by Maria Morris Hamburg and John Szarkowski when preparing a landmark exhibition at MOMA[21] This idea has been supported by researchers such as Rosalind Krauss and other experts.[20][11]

Subject matter edit

By 1891 Atget advertised his business with a shingle at his door, remarked later by Berenice Abbott,[10] that announced “Documents pour Artistes”. Initially his subjects were flowers, animals, landscapes, and monuments; sharp and meticulous studies centred simply in the frame and intended for artists' use.[23]

Atget then embarked on a series of picturesque views of Paris which include documentation of the small trades in his series Petits Métiers.[24][15] He made views of gardens in the areas surrounding Paris, in the summer of 1901, photographing the gardens at Versailles,[25] a challenging subject of large scale and with combinations of natural and architectural and sculptural elements which he would revisit until 1927, learning to make balanced compositions and perspectives.[23]

Early in the 1900s, Atget began to document “Old Paris,” reading extensively in order to sympathetically focus on Paris architecture and environments dating prior to the French Revolution, concern over the preservation of which ensured him commercial success.[26] He framed the winding streets to show the historic buildings in context, rather than making frontal architectural elevations.[15][27]

Atget's specialisation in imagery of Old Paris expanded his clientele. Amongst his scant surviving documents was his notebook, known by the word Repertoire on its cover (the French repertoire meaning a thumb-indexed address book or directory, but also defined, aptly in actor Atget's case, as 'a stock of plays, dances, or items that a company or a performer knows or is prepared to perform'). The book is now in the MoMA collection, and in it he recorded the names and addresses of 460 clients;[28] architects, interior decorators, builders and their artisans skilled in ironwork, wood panelling, door knockers, also painters, engravers, illustrators, and set designers, jewellers René Lalique and Weller, antiquarians and historians, artists including Tsuguharu Foujita, Maurice de Vlaminck and Georges Braque, well-known authors, editors, publishers Armand Colin and Hachette, and professors, including the many who donated their own collections of his photographs to institutions. The address book lists also contacts at publications, such as L’Illustration, Revue Hebdomadaire, Les Annales politiques et litteraires, and l’Art et des artistes. Institutional collectors of Old Paris documents, including archives, schools, and museums were also a keen clientele and brought him commercial success, with commissions from the Bibliotèque Historique de la Ville de Paris in 1906 and 1911 and the sale of various albums of photographs to the Bibliotèque Nationale[29]

Atget's photographs attracted the attention of, and were purchased by, artists such as Henri Matisse, Marcel Duchamp and Picasso in the 1920s, as well as Maurice Utrillo, Edgar Degas[10] and André Derain,[30] some of whose views are seen from identical vantage-points at which Atget took pictures,[31] and were likely made with the assistance of his photographs bought from the photographer for a few cents.[32][33]

By the end of his career, Atget had worked methodically and concurrently on thirteen separate series of photographs including 'Landscape Documents', 'Picturesque Paris', 'Art in Old Paris', 'Environs', 'Topography of Old Paris', 'Tuileries', 'Vielle France', 'Interiors', 'Saint Cloud', 'Versailles', 'Parisian Parks', 'Sceaux' and a smaller series on costumes and religious arts, returning to subjects after they had been put aside for many years.[15][23]

Atget and the concept of a work of art edit

Atget and the problem of the archive edit

The principle of the archive is considered as the basis of the artistic program by many researchers of Atget's work.[21][20][11] The research of Maria Morris Hamburg and John Szarkowski corrected the understanding of Atget's program. It implied that the photographer was not creating a pictorial monolith, but a catalog that was part of the artistic and semantic system of his photographs.[21][20][11] This circumstance allows us to perceive Atget’s works as an example of a specific artistic program and consider them as an example of non-logical forms in photography.

Atget's photographs: the problem of the work of art edit

One of the central problems associated with Atget's work is determining the balance between fiction and documentary.[22] Atget created his photographs as utilitarian materials (documents for artists or archival images of Parisian monuments) - their artistic status was partly the result of later readings.[21] Rosalind Krauss draws attention to the fact that the central theme associated with Atget’s works is the uncertainty of the boundaries of the work.[20] It is not entirely clear what should be considered a master’s work—a single selected frame or a complete corpus of several thousand images. Atget's photographs highlighted the problem of the singularity of the work and questioned the possibility of its integrity and semantic completeness.[34]

Surrealist appropriation edit

Man Ray, who lived on the same street as Atget in Paris, the rue Campagne-Première in Montparnasse purchased and collected almost fifty of Atget's photographs into an album embossed with the name 'Atget', "coll. Man Ray" and a date, 1926.[35] He published several of Atget's photographs in his La Révolution surréaliste;[3][4] most famously in issue number 7, of 15 June 1926, his Pendant l’éclipse made fourteen years earlier and showing a crowd gathered at the Colonne de Juillet to peer through various devices, or through their bare fingers, at the Solar eclipse of 17 April 1912. Atget however did not regard himself as a Surrealist.[36][37] When Ray asked Atget if he could use his photo, Atget said: "Don't put my name on it. These are simply documents I make."[38] Man Ray proposed that Atget's pictures of staircases, doorways, ragpickers, and especially those with window reflections (when foreground and background mix and mannequins looks like ready to step out[39]), had a Dada or Surrealist quality about them.[40]

Abigail Solomon Godeau referred to part of Atget's photos as surrealist .[39]

Atget and Walter Benjamin edit

One of the earliest analytical texts about Atget is Walter Benjamin's essay A Brief History of Photography (1931).[41] Benjamin views Atget as a forerunner of surrealist photography, effectively making him a member of the European avant-garde. In his understanding, Atget is a representative of a new photographic vision, and not a master of idyllic photographs of 19th-century Paris.[34] He names Atget as the discoverer of the fragment that will become the central motif of the New Vision photograph. Benjamin draws attention to the fact that Atget liberates photography from the aura that was characteristic of both early 19th-century photography and classical works of art in particular. Thus, Walter Benjamin denotes the direction of research into the frame and technical arts, which he will continue in his essay The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction.[42]

Recognition in America edit

He will be remembered as an urbanist historian, a genuine romanticist, a lover of Paris, a Balzac of the camera, from whose work we can weave a large tapestry of French civilization.

— Berenice Abbott[43]

After Atget's death his friend, the actor André Calmettes, sorted his work into two categories; 2,000 records of historic Paris, and photographs of all other subjects. The former, he gave to the French government; the others he sold to the American photographer Berenice Abbott,[44]

Atget created a comprehensive photographic record of the look and feel of nineteenth-century Paris just as it was being dramatically transformed by modernization,[45] and its buildings were being systematically demolished.[46]

When Berenice Abbott reportedly asked him if the French appreciated his art, he responded ironically, "No, only young foreigners."[1] While Ray and Abbott claimed to have 'discovered' him around 1925,[2] he was certainly not the unknown 'primitive' 'tramp' or 'Douanier Rousseau of the street' that they took him for;[30] he had, since 1900, as counted by Alain Fourquier, 182 reproductions of 158 images in 29 publications and had sold, between 1898 and 1927 and beyond the postcards he published, sometimes more than 1000 pictures a year to public institutions including the Bibliothèque Nationale, Bibliothèque Historique de la Ville de Paris, Musée Carnavalet, Musée de Sculpture Comparé, École des Beaux-Arts, the Directorate of Fine Arts and others.[47]

During the Depression in the 1930s Abbott sold half of her collection to Julian Levy, who owned a gallery in New York.[14] Since he had difficulty selling the prints, he allowed Abbott to keep them in her possession.[3][4] In the late 1960s Abbott and Levy sold the collection of Atgets to The Museum of Modern Art. As MoMA bought it, the collection contained 1415 glass negatives and nearly 8,000 vintage prints from over 4,000 distinct negatives.[15]

The publication of his work in the United States after his death and the promotion of his work to English-speaking audiences was due to Berenice Abbott.[2] She exhibited, printed and wrote about his work, and assembled a substantial archive of writings about his portfolio by herself and others.[48] Abbott published Atget, Photographe de Paris in 1930, the first overview of his photographic oeuvre and the beginning of his international fame.[3][4] She also published a book with prints she made from Atget's negatives: The World of Atget (1964).[49] Berenice Abbott and Eugene Atget was published in 2002.[44]

As the city and architecture are two main themes in Atget's photographs, his work has been commented on and reviewed together with the work of Berenice Abbott and Amanda Bouchenoire, in the book Architecture and Cities. Three Photographic Gazes, where author Jerome Saltz analyzes historicist perspectives and considers their aesthetic implications: "(...) the three authors coincide in the search for and exaltation of intrinsic beauty in their objectives, regardless of quality and clarity of their references."[50]

Legacy edit

In 1929, eleven of Atget's photographs were shown at the Film und Foto Werkbund exhibition in Stuttgart.[3][4]

The U.S. Library of Congress has some 20 prints made by Abbott in 1956.[51] The Museum of Modern Art purchased the Abbott/Levy collection of Atget's work in 1968.[3][4] MoMA published a four-volume series of books based on its four successive exhibitions of Atget's life and work, between 1981 and 1985.[23]

In 2001, the Philadelphia Museum of Art acquired the Julien Levy Collection of Photographs, the centerpiece of which includes 361 photographs by Atget.[52] Many of these photographs were printed by Atget himself and purchased by Levy directly from the photographer. Others arrived in Levy's possession when he and Berenice Abbott entered a partnership to preserve Atget's studio in 1930. Eighty-three prints in the Levy Collection were made by Abbott posthumously as exhibition prints that she produced directly from Atget's glass negatives.[53] Additionally, the Levy Collection included three of Atget's photographic albums, crafted by the photographer himself.[54] The most complete is an album of domestic interiors titled Intérieurs Parisiens Début du XXe Siècle, Artistiques, Pittoresques & Bourgeois. The other two albums are fragmentary. Album No. 1, Jardin des Tuileries has only four pages still intact, and the other lacks a cover and title but contains photographs from numerous Parisian parks. In total, the Philadelphia Museum of Art holds approximately 489 objects attributed to Atget.

Atget, a Retrospective was presented at the Bibliothèque Nationale of Paris in 2007.

The Atget crater on the planet Mercury is named after him, as is Rue Eugène-Atget in the 13th arrondissement of Paris.

Although no statement by Atget about his technique or aesthetic approach survives,[40] he did sum up his life's work in a letter to the Minister of Fine Arts;

For more than 20 years I have been working alone and of my own initiative in all the old streets of Old Paris to make a collection of 18 × 24cm photographic negatives: artistic documents of beautiful urban architecture from the 16th to the 19th centuries…today this enormous artistic and documentary collection is finished; I can say that I possess all of Old Paris

— Eugène Atget, Atget, E. Letter to Paul Léon, Ministre des Beaux-Arts, November 12, 1920.

Copyright edit

The U.S. Library of Congress was unable to determine the ownership of the twenty Atget photographs in its collection,[51] thus suggesting that they are technically orphan works. Abbott clearly had a copyright on the selection and arrangement of his photographs in her books, which is now owned by Commerce Graphics.[51] The Library also stated that the Museum of Modern Art, which owns the collection of Atget's negatives, reported that Atget had no heirs and that any rights on these works may have expired.[51]

Collections edit

Gallery edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ a b c White, Edmund (2001). The Flâneur: A Stroll Through the Paradoxes of Paris. London: Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 41–43. ISBN 1582342121.
  2. ^ a b c d "In Focus: Eugène Atget (Getty Bookstore)". Getty.edu. Retrieved 20 April 2013.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Paris: pp. 240–246
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Photographers A–Z: p. 17
  5. ^ 12 Rue des Beaux-Arts
  6. ^ 5 Rue de la Pitié
  7. ^ Hannavy, John (2005), Encyclopedia of Nineteenth-Century Photography, Taylor & Francis Ltd, ISBN 978-0-203-94178-2
  8. ^ 17bis Rue Campagne-Première
  9. ^ Anne Tucker, Profile of Berenice Abbott, The Woman's Eye (Alfred A. Knopf, 1973), p. 77.
  10. ^ a b c Sullivan, George (2006), Berenice Abbott, photographer : an independent vision, Clarion Books, p. 49, ISBN 978-0-618-44026-9
  11. ^ a b c d e Vasilyeva E. (2022) 36 essays on photographers. St. Petersburg: Palmira. P. 18-24.
  12. ^ Szarkowski J. Atget. New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 2004.
  13. ^ Hambourg, Maria M. "The Collection." MoMA.org. Oxford University Press, n.d. Web. 22 February 2013.
  14. ^ a b c Hambourg, M.M. 1980. Eugène Atget 1857–1927: The Structure of the Work. PhD Thesis, Columbia University. 66–74.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g Camille Moore, An Analytical Study of Eugène Atget's Photographs at the Museum of Modern Art. In Topics in Photographic Preservation 2007, Volume 12, Article 28. pp. 194–210
  16. ^ a b Cartier Bresson, A. 1987. Techniques d'Analyse Appliquées aux Photographies d'Eugène Atget Conservées dans les Collections de la Ville de Paris. ICOM committee for conservation: 8th triennial meeting, Sydney, Australia, 6–11 September 1987. The Getty Conservation Institute. 653–658.
  17. ^ a b Price, B.A. and K. Sutherland. 2005. 'Looking at Atget's and Abbott's Prints: The Photographic Materials.' In Barberie, Peter. Looking at Atget. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. 103–120.
  18. ^ Reilly, J.M. 1980. The Albumen and Salted Paper Book: the History and Practice of Photographic Printing 1840–1895. Rochester: Light Impressions NY.
  19. ^ Barberie P. Looking at Atget. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2005.
  20. ^ a b c d e Krauss R. Photography's Discursive Spaces: Landscape/View // Art Journal, Vol. 42, No. 4, The Crisis in the Discipline (Winter, 1982), pp. 311-319.
  21. ^ a b c d e Szarkowski J., Hamburg M. M. The Work of Atget: Volume 1 — 4. New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 1981—1985.
  22. ^ a b Vasilyeva E. (2013) Eugene Atget and the legacy of the 19th century photographic school. / Vasilyeva E. City and Shadow. The image of the city in artistic photography of the 19th-20th centuries. Saarbrucken: Lambert Academic Publishing. p. 131-143.
  23. ^ a b c d Szarkowski, John; Hambourg, Maria Morris; Atget, Eugène, 1856–1927; Museum of Modern Art (New York, N.Y.) (1981), The work of Atget, Museum of Modern Art; Boston : Distributed by New York Graphic Society, ISBN 978-0-87070-218-1{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  24. ^ Le Gall, Guillaume; Holmes, Brian (1998), Atget, life in Paris, Hazan, ISBN 978-2-85025-641-7
  25. ^ Atget, Eugène; Adams, William Howard; Royal Institute of British Architects; International Center of Photography; International Exhibitions Foundation (1979). Atget's gardens : a selection of Eugene Atget's garden photographs (1st ed.). Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-385-15320-1.
  26. ^ Harris, D. 1999. Eugène Atget: Unknown Paris. New York: The New Press
  27. ^ Kozloff, Max. 'Abandoned and Seductive: Atget's Streets'. In The Privileged Eye: Essays on Photography (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1987).
  28. ^ Fourquier, Alain (2007), Atget : un photographe déjà célèbre de son vivant, S. Fourquier, ISBN 978-2-9528594-0-0
  29. ^ Nesbit, M. 1992. Atget’s Seven Albums. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  30. ^ a b Scharf, Aaron; Scharf, Aaron, 1922– (1968), Art and photography, Allen Lane, p. 292n, ISBN 978-0-7139-0052-1{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  31. ^ Atget, Eugène; Proust, Marcel, 1871–1922; Trottenberg, Arthur D (1963), A vision of Paris, Macmillan, ISBN 978-0-02-620160-5{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  32. ^ The Robert Lehman Collection, vol. I-III. 3 : [paintings] : Nineteenth- and twentieth-century paintings, 2010, p. 272
  33. ^ McArdle, James (12 February 2019). "Inconnu". On This Date in Photography. Retrieved 11 September 2019.
  34. ^ a b Vasilyeva E. (2018) Eugene Atget: artistic biography and mythological program // International Journal of Cultural Studies, No. 1 (30): 30 - 38.
  35. ^ Laxton, Susan; ProQuest (Firm) (2019), Surrealism at play, Duke University Press, ISBN 978-1-4780-0343-4
  36. ^ Steer, Linda (2017), Appropriated photographs in French surrealist periodicals, 1924–1939, Abingdon, Oxon New York, NY Routledge, ISBN 978-1-351-57625-3
  37. ^ Dana Macfarlane, 'Photography at the Threshold: Atget, Benjamin and Surrealism'. In History of Photography, 34, no. 1 (2010): 17-28.
  38. ^ Atget quoted by Ray in Paul Hill and Ton1 Cooper, 'Interview: Man Ray'. In Camera 74 (February 1975): 39–40.
  39. ^ a b Warner Marien, Mary. Photography visionaries. ISBN 978-1-78067-475-9.
  40. ^ a b Barberie, Peter. "Looking at Atget" (New Haven and London, Yale University Press, 2005) p53–56
  41. ^ Benjamin W. Kleine Geschichte der Photographie // Literarische Welt, 1931, September 18 and 25, October 2.
  42. ^ Benjamin W. Das Kunstwerk im Zeitalter seiner technischen Reproduzierbarkeit (vier Fassungen 1935–1939). Erstausgabe [franz. Übers.] In: Zeitschrift für Sozialforschung. 1936.
  43. ^ quoted in Paris, p. 22
  44. ^ a b Worswick, C. 2002. Berenice Abbott and Eugène Atget. Santa Fe, NM: Arena Editions.
  45. ^ Davis, Douglas. "The Picasso of Photography." Newsweek 98 (1981): 88–89. Print.
  46. ^ Fabrikant, Geraldine. "Paris That Awoke to Atget's Lens." Editorial. The New York Times 3 October 2012, Cultured Traveler sec.: 8. Log in. Web. 22 February 2013.
  47. ^ Atget, Eugène, 1856–1927; Aubenas, Sylvie; Le Gall, Guillaume; Bibliothèque nationale de France; Martin-Gropius-Bau (Berlin, Germany) (2007), Atget : une rétrospective, Bibliothèque nationale de France : Hazan, ISBN 978-2-7541-0166-0{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  48. ^ See Peter Barr's PhD dissertation "Becoming Documentary: Berenice Abbott's Photographs 1925–1939" (Boston University, 1997). Also: Berenice Abbott & Eugène Atget by Clark Worswick.
  49. ^ The World of Atget Horizon Press, New York 1964
  50. ^ Saltz, Jerome (2020). Architecture and Cities. Three Photographic Gazes: Eugène Atget, Berenice Abbott, Amanda Bouchenoire. México: Greka Editions. p. 42.
  51. ^ a b c d "Eugene Atget – Rights and Restrictions Information (Prints and Photographs Reading Room, Library of Congress)". Loc.gov. 22 October 2010. Retrieved 20 April 2013.
  52. ^ Peter Barberie, Looking At Atget (Philadelphia: Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2005), vi.
  53. ^ Peter Barberie, Looking At Atget (Philadelphia: Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2005), 58.
  54. ^ Peter Barberie, Looking At Atget (Philadelphia: Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2005), 15–17.
  55. ^ "Jean-Eugène-Auguste Atget," Art Institute of Chicago, https://www.artic.edu/collection?q=%22Jean-Eug%C3%A8ne-Auguste%20Atget%22&department_ids=Photography
  56. ^ "Eugène Atget". International Center of Photography. Retrieved 19 February 2020.
  57. ^ "Eugène Atget". International Photography Hall of Fame. Retrieved 19 February 2020.
  58. ^ "Eugène Atget". The J. Paul Getty Museum. Retrieved 19 February 2020.
  59. ^ Note reflection of Atget's tripod and camera covered by a black cloth. Paris:p. 168
  60. ^ Paris, p. 248: this image appeared on the front of La Révolution surréaliste no. 7, 15 June 1926

Bibliography edit

  • Atget, Eugène. Atget: Photographe de Paris (Paris, 1930)
  • Badger, Gerry. "Eugene Atget: A Vision of Paris" British Journal of Photography 123, no 6039 (23 April 1976): 344–347.
  • Barberie, Peter. Looking at Atget (New Haven and London, Yale University Press, 2005) 53–56
  • Barbin, Pierre. Colloque Atget (Paris: Collège de France, 1986).
  • Buerger, Janet E. The Era of the French Calotype (New York: International Museum of Photography at George Eastman House, 1982).
  • Buisine, Alain. Eugène Atget ou la melancolie en photographie (Nîmes: Editions Jacqueline Chambon, 1994).
  • Kozloff, Max. "Abandoned and Seductive: Atget's Streets" in The Privileged Eye: Essays on Photography (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1987).
  • Koetzle, Hans-Michel. Photographers A–Z (Taschen, 2011) ISBN 978-3-8365-1109-4
  • Krase, Andreas. Archive of Visions – Inventory of Things: Eugene Atget's Paris
  • Krase, Andreas; Adam, Hans Christian (2008) [2000]. Paris: Eugène Atget. Taschen. ISBN 978-3-8365-0471-3.
  • Leroy, Jean. Atget: Magicien du vieux Paris en son époque (Paris: P.A.V., 1992).
  • Macchiarella, Lindsey (2017). "Early French Modernism Across Modalities: Erik Satie and Eugène Atget". Music in Art: International Journal for Music Iconography. 42 (1–2): 309–328. ISSN 1522-7464.
  • Nesbit, Molly. Atget's Seven Albums (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1992).
  • Reynaud, Françoise. Les voitures d'Atget au musée Carnavalet (Paris: Editions Carre, 1991).
  • Rice, Shelley. Parisian Views (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1997).
  • Russell, John. "Atget", The New York Times Magazine, 13 September 1981.
  • Szarkowski, John. Atget (New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 2000).
  • Szarkowski, John and Maria Morris Hamburg. The Work of Atget: Volume 1, Old France (New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 1981).
  • Szarkowski, John and Maria Morris Hamburg. The Work of Atget: Volume 2, The Art of Old Paris (New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 1982).
  • Szarkowski, John and Maria Morris Hamburg. The Work of Atget: Volume 3, The Ancien Régime (New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 1983).
  • Szarkowski, John and Maria Morris Hamburg. The Work of Atget: Volume 4, Modern Times (New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 1985).
  • Saltz, Jerome. Estructura y armonía. Ciudades y arquitecturas. Tres visiones fotográficas: Eugène Atget, Berenice Abbott, Amanda Bouchenoire" (México: Greka Editions. Schedio Biblio, 2020).
  • Vasilyeva Ekaterina. (2022) 36 essays on photographers. St. Petersburg: Palmira. P. 18-24.
  • Vasilyeva Ekaterina. (2018) Eugene Atget: artistic biography and mythological program // International Journal of Cultural Studies, No. 1 (30): 30 - 38.
  • Vasilyeva Ekaterina. (2013) Eugene Atget and the legacy of the 19th century photographic school. / Vasilyeva E. City and Shadow. The image of the city in artistic photography of the 19th-20th centuries. Saarbrucken: Lambert Academic Publishing. p. 131-143. ISBN 978-3-8484-3923-2
  • Atget, Eugène; Wiegand, Wilfried (1998). Eugène Atget: Paris. New York: te Neues Publishing. ISBN 978-3823803638.
  • The World of Atget, 1964.
  • Atget's Gardens: A Selection of Eugene Atget's Garden Photographs, 1979.
  • Eugene Atget: A Selection of Photographs from the Collection of Musee Carnavalet, Paris, 1985.

External links edit

  • Eugène Atget at the Museum of Modern Art
  • Atget collection in the Eastman Museum
  • Eugène Atget at Luminous Lint
  • Eugene Atget and Haunted Paris: Trees, Parks and Architecture
  • Atget's Portfolio at Photography-now
  • , a project to reconstruct some of Atget's photographs nearly 100 years later
  • "Photography View: Eugene Atget – His Art Bridged Two Centuries," New York Times, March 10, 1985
  • Bibliothèque numérique INHA – Fonds photographique Eugène Atget de l'ENSBA
  • Estructura y armonia. Ciudades y arquitecturas. Tres visiones fotograficas: Eugene Atget, Berenice Abbott, Amanda Bouchenoire

eugène, atget, french, adʒɛ, february, 1857, august, 1927, french, flâneur, pioneer, documentary, photography, noted, determination, document, architecture, street, scenes, paris, before, their, disappearance, modernization, most, photographs, were, first, pub. Eugene Atget French adʒɛ 12 February 1857 4 August 1927 was a French flaneur 1 and a pioneer of documentary photography noted for his determination to document all of the architecture and street scenes of Paris before their disappearance to modernization 1 Most of his photographs were first published by Berenice Abbott after his death 2 Though he sold his work to artists and craftspeople and became an inspiration for the surrealists he did not live to see the wide acclaim his work would eventually receive 2 Eugene AtgetAtget c 1890BornJean Eugene Auguste Atget 1857 02 12 12 February 1857Libourne Gironde Aquitaine FranceDied4 August 1927 1927 08 04 aged 70 Paris FranceKnown forphotographySpouseValentine Delafosse CompagnonOrgan Grinder 1898 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years 1 2 Moving to Paris 1 3 Photography and documents for artists 1 4 Later years and creative heritage 1 5 Atget and biographical myth 2 Photographic practice 2 1 The beginning of photography and photography of Paris 2 2 Specifics of the technique 2 3 Features and specifics of photographic practice 3 Subject matter 4 Atget and the concept of a work of art 4 1 Atget and the problem of the archive 4 2 Atget s photographs the problem of the work of art 5 Surrealist appropriation 6 Atget and Walter Benjamin 7 Recognition in America 8 Legacy 9 Copyright 10 Collections 11 Gallery 12 Notes and references 13 Bibliography 14 External linksBiography edit nbsp Atget s birthplace in LibourneEarly years edit Jean Eugene Auguste Atget was born 12 February 1857 in Libourne His father carriage builder Jean Eugene Atget died in 1862 and his mother Clara Adeline Atget nee Hourlier died shortly after he was an orphan at age seven He was brought up by his maternal grandparents in Bordeaux and after finishing secondary education joined the merchant navy 3 4 Moving to Paris edit Atget moved to Paris in 1878 He failed the entrance exam for acting class but was admitted when he had a second try Because he was drafted for military service he could attend class only part time and he was expelled from drama school 3 4 Still living in Paris 5 he became an actor with a travelling group performing in the Paris suburbs and the provinces He met actress Valentine Delafosse Compagnon who became his companion until her death He gave up acting because of an infection of his vocal cords in 1887 moved to the provinces and took up painting without success When he was thirty he made his first photographs of Amiens and Beauvais which date from 1888 3 4 Photography and documents for artists edit In 1890 Atget moved back to Paris 6 and became a professional photographer supplying documents for artists 7 studies for painters architects and stage designers 3 4 Starting in 1898 institutions such as the Musee Carnavalet and the Bibliotheque historique de la ville de Paris bought his photographs The latter commissioned him ca 1906 to systematically photograph old buildings in Paris In 1899 he moved to Montparnasse 3 8 While being a photographer Atget still called himself an actor giving lectures and readings 3 During World War I Atget temporarily stored his archives in his basement for safekeeping and almost completely gave up photography Valentine s son Leon was killed at the front 3 In 1920 21 he sold thousands of his negatives to institutions Financially independent he took up photographing the parks of Versailles Saint Cloud and Sceaux and produced a series of photographs of prostitutes 3 Later years and creative heritage edit Berenice Abbott while working with Man Ray visited Atget in 1925 bought some of his photographs and tried to interest other artists in his work 3 She continued to promote Atget through various articles exhibitions and books and sold her Atget collection to the Museum of Modern Art in 1968 9 In 1926 Atget s partner Valentine died 3 and before he saw the full face and profile portraits that Abbott took of him in 1927 showing him slightly stooped tired sad remote appealing 10 Atget died on 4 August in 1927 in Paris 3 4 Atget and biographical myth edit At the moment not many reliable facts from Atget s life are known It is believed that Atget was poor while at the same time there is an assumption that the photographer s cramped financial circumstances are a myth established by later researchers in attempts to create the image of a romantic artist 11 In his research John Szarkowski 12 cited a fragment of Atget s correspondence with Paul Leon a professor at the College de France an employee of the Commission on Historical Monuments and one of the top officials of the French Ministry of Culture French from which it follows that they sold 2 600 negatives for 10 000 francs This is one of the largest but not the only lifetime sales of Atget Photographic practice edit nbsp Avenue des Gobelins 1927 The beginning of photography and photography of Paris edit Atget took up photography in the late 1880s around the time that photography was experiencing unprecedented expansion in both commercial and amateur fields 13 Atget photographed Paris with a large format wooden bellows camera with a rapid rectilinear lens an instrument that was fairly current when he took it up but which he continued to use even when hand held and more efficient large format cameras became available The optical vignetting often seen at some corners of his photographs is due to his having repositioned the lens relative to the plate on the camera exploiting one of the features of bellows view cameras as a way to correct perspective and control perspective and keep vertical forms straight The negatives show four small clear rebates printing black where clips held the glass in the plate holder during exposure The glass plates were 180 240mm Bande Bleue Blue Ribbon brand with a general purpose gelatin silver emulsion 14 fairly slow that necessitated quite long exposures resulting in the blurring of moving subjects seen in some of his pictures 15 Interest in Atget s work has prompted the recent scientific analysis of Atget s negatives and prints in Parisian collections 16 and in the Philadelphia Museum of Art 17 Specifics of the technique edit In Interieurs Parisiens a series of photographs he took for the Biblioteque Nationale he included a view of his own simple darkroom with trays for processing negatives and prints a safelight and printing frames After taking a photograph Atget would develop wash and fix his negative then assign the negative to one of his filing categories with the next consecutive number that he would write the negative number in graphite on the verso of the negative and also scratch it into the emulsion He contact printed his negatives onto pre sensitized commercially available printing out papers 15 14 albumen paper gelatin silver printing out paper or two types of matte albumen paper that he used mainly after WW1 16 The negative was clamped into a printing frame under glass and against a sheet of albumen photographic printing out paper 18 which was left out in the sun to expose The frame permitted inspection of the print until a satisfactory exposure was achieved then Atget washed fixed and toned his print with gold toner as was the standard practice when he took up photography 17 Atget did not use an enlarger and all of his prints are the same size as their negatives Prints would be numbered and labelled on their backs in pencil then inserted by the corners into four slits cut in each page of albums Additional albums were assembled based on a specific themes that might be of interest to his clients and separate from series or chronology 15 Features and specifics of photographic practice edit One of the main issues related to Atget s work is the nature and specificity of his legacy Some researchers consider him first of all the author of romantic Parisian views 19 Other researchers believe that the size of the archive is important in assessing his work the entire corpus of 10 thousand photographs and not just individual photographs 11 20 It is believed that the meaning of his activity is not only in the creation of individual images but also in the formation of a sequential series of images 21 In this case it is important to have an exceptional number of photographs about 10 thousand as well as the use of a systematic archival principle 22 The idea of a work as a community was used by Maria Morris Hamburg and John Szarkowski when preparing a landmark exhibition at MOMA 21 This idea has been supported by researchers such as Rosalind Krauss and other experts 20 11 Subject matter editBy 1891 Atget advertised his business with a shingle at his door remarked later by Berenice Abbott 10 that announced Documents pour Artistes Initially his subjects were flowers animals landscapes and monuments sharp and meticulous studies centred simply in the frame and intended for artists use 23 Atget then embarked on a series of picturesque views of Paris which include documentation of the small trades in his series Petits Metiers 24 15 He made views of gardens in the areas surrounding Paris in the summer of 1901 photographing the gardens at Versailles 25 a challenging subject of large scale and with combinations of natural and architectural and sculptural elements which he would revisit until 1927 learning to make balanced compositions and perspectives 23 Early in the 1900s Atget began to document Old Paris reading extensively in order to sympathetically focus on Paris architecture and environments dating prior to the French Revolution concern over the preservation of which ensured him commercial success 26 He framed the winding streets to show the historic buildings in context rather than making frontal architectural elevations 15 27 Atget s specialisation in imagery of Old Paris expanded his clientele Amongst his scant surviving documents was his notebook known by the word Repertoire on its cover the French repertoire meaning a thumb indexed address book or directory but also defined aptly in actor Atget s case as a stock of plays dances or items that a company or a performer knows or is prepared to perform The book is now in the MoMA collection and in it he recorded the names and addresses of 460 clients 28 architects interior decorators builders and their artisans skilled in ironwork wood panelling door knockers also painters engravers illustrators and set designers jewellers Rene Lalique and Weller antiquarians and historians artists including Tsuguharu Foujita Maurice de Vlaminck and Georges Braque well known authors editors publishers Armand Colin and Hachette and professors including the many who donated their own collections of his photographs to institutions The address book lists also contacts at publications such as L Illustration Revue Hebdomadaire Les Annales politiques et litteraires and l Art et des artistes Institutional collectors of Old Paris documents including archives schools and museums were also a keen clientele and brought him commercial success with commissions from the Biblioteque Historique de la Ville de Paris in 1906 and 1911 and the sale of various albums of photographs to the Biblioteque Nationale 29 Atget s photographs attracted the attention of and were purchased by artists such as Henri Matisse Marcel Duchamp and Picasso in the 1920s as well as Maurice Utrillo Edgar Degas 10 and Andre Derain 30 some of whose views are seen from identical vantage points at which Atget took pictures 31 and were likely made with the assistance of his photographs bought from the photographer for a few cents 32 33 By the end of his career Atget had worked methodically and concurrently on thirteen separate series of photographs including Landscape Documents Picturesque Paris Art in Old Paris Environs Topography of Old Paris Tuileries Vielle France Interiors Saint Cloud Versailles Parisian Parks Sceaux and a smaller series on costumes and religious arts returning to subjects after they had been put aside for many years 15 23 Atget and the concept of a work of art editAtget and the problem of the archive edit The principle of the archive is considered as the basis of the artistic program by many researchers of Atget s work 21 20 11 The research of Maria Morris Hamburg and John Szarkowski corrected the understanding of Atget s program It implied that the photographer was not creating a pictorial monolith but a catalog that was part of the artistic and semantic system of his photographs 21 20 11 This circumstance allows us to perceive Atget s works as an example of a specific artistic program and consider them as an example of non logical forms in photography Atget s photographs the problem of the work of art edit One of the central problems associated with Atget s work is determining the balance between fiction and documentary 22 Atget created his photographs as utilitarian materials documents for artists or archival images of Parisian monuments their artistic status was partly the result of later readings 21 Rosalind Krauss draws attention to the fact that the central theme associated with Atget s works is the uncertainty of the boundaries of the work 20 It is not entirely clear what should be considered a master s work a single selected frame or a complete corpus of several thousand images Atget s photographs highlighted the problem of the singularity of the work and questioned the possibility of its integrity and semantic completeness 34 Surrealist appropriation editMan Ray who lived on the same street as Atget in Paris the rue Campagne Premiere in Montparnasse purchased and collected almost fifty of Atget s photographs into an album embossed with the name Atget coll Man Ray and a date 1926 35 He published several of Atget s photographs in his La Revolution surrealiste 3 4 most famously in issue number 7 of 15 June 1926 his Pendant l eclipse made fourteen years earlier and showing a crowd gathered at the Colonne de Juillet to peer through various devices or through their bare fingers at the Solar eclipse of 17 April 1912 Atget however did not regard himself as a Surrealist 36 37 When Ray asked Atget if he could use his photo Atget said Don t put my name on it These are simply documents I make 38 Man Ray proposed that Atget s pictures of staircases doorways ragpickers and especially those with window reflections when foreground and background mix and mannequins looks like ready to step out 39 had a Dada or Surrealist quality about them 40 Abigail Solomon Godeau referred to part of Atget s photos as surrealist 39 Atget and Walter Benjamin editOne of the earliest analytical texts about Atget is Walter Benjamin s essay A Brief History of Photography 1931 41 Benjamin views Atget as a forerunner of surrealist photography effectively making him a member of the European avant garde In his understanding Atget is a representative of a new photographic vision and not a master of idyllic photographs of 19th century Paris 34 He names Atget as the discoverer of the fragment that will become the central motif of the New Vision photograph Benjamin draws attention to the fact that Atget liberates photography from the aura that was characteristic of both early 19th century photography and classical works of art in particular Thus Walter Benjamin denotes the direction of research into the frame and technical arts which he will continue in his essay The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction 42 Recognition in America editHe will be remembered as an urbanist historian a genuine romanticist a lover of Paris a Balzac of the camera from whose work we can weave a large tapestry of French civilization Berenice Abbott 43 After Atget s death his friend the actor Andre Calmettes sorted his work into two categories 2 000 records of historic Paris and photographs of all other subjects The former he gave to the French government the others he sold to the American photographer Berenice Abbott 44 Atget created a comprehensive photographic record of the look and feel of nineteenth century Paris just as it was being dramatically transformed by modernization 45 and its buildings were being systematically demolished 46 When Berenice Abbott reportedly asked him if the French appreciated his art he responded ironically No only young foreigners 1 While Ray and Abbott claimed to have discovered him around 1925 2 he was certainly not the unknown primitive tramp or Douanier Rousseau of the street that they took him for 30 he had since 1900 as counted by Alain Fourquier 182 reproductions of 158 images in 29 publications and had sold between 1898 and 1927 and beyond the postcards he published sometimes more than 1000 pictures a year to public institutions including the Bibliotheque Nationale Bibliotheque Historique de la Ville de Paris Musee Carnavalet Musee de Sculpture Compare Ecole des Beaux Arts the Directorate of Fine Arts and others 47 During the Depression in the 1930s Abbott sold half of her collection to Julian Levy who owned a gallery in New York 14 Since he had difficulty selling the prints he allowed Abbott to keep them in her possession 3 4 In the late 1960s Abbott and Levy sold the collection of Atgets to The Museum of Modern Art As MoMA bought it the collection contained 1415 glass negatives and nearly 8 000 vintage prints from over 4 000 distinct negatives 15 The publication of his work in the United States after his death and the promotion of his work to English speaking audiences was due to Berenice Abbott 2 She exhibited printed and wrote about his work and assembled a substantial archive of writings about his portfolio by herself and others 48 Abbott published Atget Photographe de Paris in 1930 the first overview of his photographic oeuvre and the beginning of his international fame 3 4 She also published a book with prints she made from Atget s negatives The World of Atget 1964 49 Berenice Abbott and Eugene Atget was published in 2002 44 As the city and architecture are two main themes in Atget s photographs his work has been commented on and reviewed together with the work of Berenice Abbott and Amanda Bouchenoire in the book Architecture and Cities Three Photographic Gazes where author Jerome Saltz analyzes historicist perspectives and considers their aesthetic implications the three authors coincide in the search for and exaltation of intrinsic beauty in their objectives regardless of quality and clarity of their references 50 Legacy editIn 1929 eleven of Atget s photographs were shown at the Film und Foto Werkbund exhibition in Stuttgart 3 4 The U S Library of Congress has some 20 prints made by Abbott in 1956 51 The Museum of Modern Art purchased the Abbott Levy collection of Atget s work in 1968 3 4 MoMA published a four volume series of books based on its four successive exhibitions of Atget s life and work between 1981 and 1985 23 In 2001 the Philadelphia Museum of Art acquired the Julien Levy Collection of Photographs the centerpiece of which includes 361 photographs by Atget 52 Many of these photographs were printed by Atget himself and purchased by Levy directly from the photographer Others arrived in Levy s possession when he and Berenice Abbott entered a partnership to preserve Atget s studio in 1930 Eighty three prints in the Levy Collection were made by Abbott posthumously as exhibition prints that she produced directly from Atget s glass negatives 53 Additionally the Levy Collection included three of Atget s photographic albums crafted by the photographer himself 54 The most complete is an album of domestic interiors titled Interieurs Parisiens Debut du XXe Siecle Artistiques Pittoresques amp Bourgeois The other two albums are fragmentary Album No 1 Jardin des Tuileries has only four pages still intact and the other lacks a cover and title but contains photographs from numerous Parisian parks In total the Philadelphia Museum of Art holds approximately 489 objects attributed to Atget Atget a Retrospective was presented at the Bibliotheque Nationale of Paris in 2007 The Atget crater on the planet Mercury is named after him as is Rue Eugene Atget in the 13th arrondissement of Paris Although no statement by Atget about his technique or aesthetic approach survives 40 he did sum up his life s work in a letter to the Minister of Fine Arts For more than 20 years I have been working alone and of my own initiative in all the old streets of Old Paris to make a collection of 18 24cm photographic negatives artistic documents of beautiful urban architecture from the 16th to the 19th centuries today this enormous artistic and documentary collection is finished I can say that I possess all of Old Paris Eugene Atget Atget E Letter to Paul Leon Ministre des Beaux Arts November 12 1920 Copyright editThe U S Library of Congress was unable to determine the ownership of the twenty Atget photographs in its collection 51 thus suggesting that they are technically orphan works Abbott clearly had a copyright on the selection and arrangement of his photographs in her books which is now owned by Commerce Graphics 51 The Library also stated that the Museum of Modern Art which owns the collection of Atget s negatives reported that Atget had no heirs and that any rights on these works may have expired 51 Collections editThe Art Institute of Chicago Chicago IL 55 International Center of Photography New York NY 56 International Photography Hall of Fame St Louis MO 57 The J Paul Getty Museum Los Angeles CA 58 Gallery edit nbsp Rags collector 1899 nbsp Au Tambour 1908 59 nbsp Atget s Salon c 1910 nbsp People watching the solar eclipse of 1912 60 nbsp Prostitute waiting in front of her door 1921 nbsp Grand Trianon Versailles nbsp Saint Cloud 1924 nbsp Hameau de la reine Versailles 1926Notes and references edit a b c White Edmund 2001 The Flaneur A Stroll Through the Paradoxes of Paris London Bloomsbury Publishing p 41 43 ISBN 1582342121 a b c d In Focus Eugene Atget Getty Bookstore Getty edu Retrieved 20 April 2013 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Paris pp 240 246 a b c d e f g h i j Photographers A Z p 17 12 Rue des Beaux Arts 5 Rue de la Pitie Hannavy John 2005 Encyclopedia of Nineteenth Century Photography Taylor amp Francis Ltd ISBN 978 0 203 94178 2 17bis Rue Campagne Premiere Anne Tucker Profile of Berenice Abbott The Woman s Eye Alfred A Knopf 1973 p 77 a b c Sullivan George 2006 Berenice Abbott photographer an independent vision Clarion Books p 49 ISBN 978 0 618 44026 9 a b c d e Vasilyeva E 2022 36 essays on photographers St Petersburg Palmira P 18 24 Szarkowski J Atget New York The Museum of Modern Art 2004 Hambourg Maria M The Collection MoMA org Oxford University Press n d Web 22 February 2013 a b c Hambourg M M 1980 Eugene Atget 1857 1927 The Structure of the Work PhD Thesis Columbia University 66 74 a b c d e f g Camille Moore An Analytical Study of Eugene Atget s Photographs at the Museum of Modern Art In Topics in Photographic Preservation 2007 Volume 12 Article 28 pp 194 210 a b Cartier Bresson A 1987 Techniques d Analyse Appliquees aux Photographies d Eugene Atget Conservees dans les Collections de la Ville de Paris ICOM committee for conservation 8th triennial meeting Sydney Australia 6 11 September 1987 The Getty Conservation Institute 653 658 a b Price B A and K Sutherland 2005 Looking at Atget s and Abbott s Prints The Photographic Materials In Barberie Peter Looking at Atget New Haven and London Yale University Press 103 120 Reilly J M 1980 The Albumen and Salted Paper Book the History and Practice of Photographic Printing 1840 1895 Rochester Light Impressions NY Barberie P Looking at Atget New Haven and London Yale University Press 2005 a b c d e Krauss R Photography s Discursive Spaces Landscape View Art Journal Vol 42 No 4 The Crisis in the Discipline Winter 1982 pp 311 319 a b c d e Szarkowski J Hamburg M M The Work of Atget Volume 1 4 New York The Museum of Modern Art 1981 1985 a b Vasilyeva E 2013 Eugene Atget and the legacy of the 19th century photographic school Vasilyeva E City and Shadow The image of the city in artistic photography of the 19th 20th centuries Saarbrucken Lambert Academic Publishing p 131 143 a b c d Szarkowski John Hambourg Maria Morris Atget Eugene 1856 1927 Museum of Modern Art New York N Y 1981 The work of Atget Museum of Modern Art Boston Distributed by New York Graphic Society ISBN 978 0 87070 218 1 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Le Gall Guillaume Holmes Brian 1998 Atget life in Paris Hazan ISBN 978 2 85025 641 7 Atget Eugene Adams William Howard Royal Institute of British Architects International Center of Photography International Exhibitions Foundation 1979 Atget s gardens a selection of Eugene Atget s garden photographs 1st ed Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 15320 1 Harris D 1999 Eugene Atget Unknown Paris New York The New Press Kozloff Max Abandoned and Seductive Atget s Streets In The Privileged Eye Essays on Photography Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 1987 Fourquier Alain 2007 Atget un photographe deja celebre de son vivant S Fourquier ISBN 978 2 9528594 0 0 Nesbit M 1992 Atget s Seven Albums New Haven Yale University Press a b Scharf Aaron Scharf Aaron 1922 1968 Art and photography Allen Lane p 292n ISBN 978 0 7139 0052 1 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Atget Eugene Proust Marcel 1871 1922 Trottenberg Arthur D 1963 A vision of Paris Macmillan ISBN 978 0 02 620160 5 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link The Robert Lehman Collection vol I III 3 paintings Nineteenth and twentieth century paintings 2010 p 272 McArdle James 12 February 2019 Inconnu On This Date in Photography Retrieved 11 September 2019 a b Vasilyeva E 2018 Eugene Atget artistic biography and mythological program International Journal of Cultural Studies No 1 30 30 38 Laxton Susan ProQuest Firm 2019 Surrealism at play Duke University Press ISBN 978 1 4780 0343 4 Steer Linda 2017 Appropriated photographs in French surrealist periodicals 1924 1939 Abingdon Oxon New York NY Routledge ISBN 978 1 351 57625 3 Dana Macfarlane Photography at the Threshold Atget Benjamin and Surrealism In History of Photography 34 no 1 2010 17 28 Atget quoted by Ray in Paul Hill and Ton1 Cooper Interview Man Ray In Camera 74 February 1975 39 40 a b Warner Marien Mary Photography visionaries ISBN 978 1 78067 475 9 a b Barberie Peter Looking at Atget New Haven and London Yale University Press 2005 p53 56 Benjamin W Kleine Geschichte der Photographie Literarische Welt 1931 September 18 and 25 October 2 Benjamin W Das Kunstwerk im Zeitalter seiner technischen Reproduzierbarkeit vier Fassungen 1935 1939 Erstausgabe franz Ubers In Zeitschrift fur Sozialforschung 1936 quoted in Paris p 22 a b Worswick C 2002 Berenice Abbott and Eugene Atget Santa Fe NM Arena Editions Davis Douglas The Picasso of Photography Newsweek 98 1981 88 89 Print Fabrikant Geraldine Paris That Awoke to Atget s Lens Editorial The New York Times 3 October 2012 Cultured Traveler sec 8 Log in Web 22 February 2013 Atget Eugene 1856 1927 Aubenas Sylvie Le Gall Guillaume Bibliotheque nationale de France Martin Gropius Bau Berlin Germany 2007 Atget une retrospective Bibliotheque nationale de France Hazan ISBN 978 2 7541 0166 0 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link See Peter Barr s PhD dissertation Becoming Documentary Berenice Abbott s Photographs 1925 1939 Boston University 1997 Also Berenice Abbott amp Eugene Atget by Clark Worswick The World of Atget Horizon Press New York 1964 Saltz Jerome 2020 Architecture and Cities Three Photographic Gazes Eugene Atget Berenice Abbott Amanda Bouchenoire Mexico Greka Editions p 42 a b c d Eugene Atget Rights and Restrictions Information Prints and Photographs Reading Room Library of Congress Loc gov 22 October 2010 Retrieved 20 April 2013 Peter Barberie Looking At Atget Philadelphia Philadelphia Museum of Art 2005 vi Peter Barberie Looking At Atget Philadelphia Philadelphia Museum of Art 2005 58 Peter Barberie Looking At Atget Philadelphia Philadelphia Museum of Art 2005 15 17 Jean Eugene Auguste Atget Art Institute of Chicago https www artic edu collection q 22Jean Eug C3 A8ne Auguste 20Atget 22 amp department ids Photography Eugene Atget International Center of Photography Retrieved 19 February 2020 Eugene Atget International Photography Hall of Fame Retrieved 19 February 2020 Eugene Atget The J Paul Getty Museum Retrieved 19 February 2020 Note reflection of Atget s tripod and camera covered by a black cloth Paris p 168 Paris p 248 this image appeared on the front of La Revolution surrealiste no 7 15 June 1926Bibliography editAtget Eugene Atget Photographe de Paris Paris 1930 Badger Gerry Eugene Atget A Vision of Paris British Journal of Photography 123 no 6039 23 April 1976 344 347 Barberie Peter Looking at Atget New Haven and London Yale University Press 2005 53 56 Barbin Pierre Colloque Atget Paris College de France 1986 Buerger Janet E The Era of the French Calotype New York International Museum of Photography at George Eastman House 1982 Buisine Alain Eugene Atget ou la melancolie en photographie Nimes Editions Jacqueline Chambon 1994 Kozloff Max Abandoned and Seductive Atget s Streets in The Privileged Eye Essays on Photography Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 1987 Koetzle Hans Michel Photographers A Z Taschen 2011 ISBN 978 3 8365 1109 4 Krase Andreas Archive of Visions Inventory of Things Eugene Atget s Paris Krase Andreas Adam Hans Christian 2008 2000 Paris Eugene Atget Taschen ISBN 978 3 8365 0471 3 Leroy Jean Atget Magicien du vieux Paris en son epoque Paris P A V 1992 Macchiarella Lindsey 2017 Early French Modernism Across Modalities Erik Satie and Eugene Atget Music in Art International Journal for Music Iconography 42 1 2 309 328 ISSN 1522 7464 Nesbit Molly Atget s Seven Albums New Haven Yale University Press 1992 Reynaud Francoise Les voitures d Atget au musee Carnavalet Paris Editions Carre 1991 Rice Shelley Parisian Views Cambridge MIT Press 1997 Russell John Atget The New York Times Magazine 13 September 1981 Szarkowski John Atget New York The Museum of Modern Art 2000 Szarkowski John and Maria Morris Hamburg The Work of Atget Volume 1 Old France New York The Museum of Modern Art 1981 Szarkowski John and Maria Morris Hamburg The Work of Atget Volume 2 The Art of Old Paris New York The Museum of Modern Art 1982 Szarkowski John and Maria Morris Hamburg The Work of Atget Volume 3 The Ancien Regime New York The Museum of Modern Art 1983 Szarkowski John and Maria Morris Hamburg The Work of Atget Volume 4 Modern Times New York The Museum of Modern Art 1985 Saltz Jerome Estructura y armonia Ciudades y arquitecturas Tres visiones fotograficas Eugene Atget Berenice Abbott Amanda Bouchenoire Mexico Greka Editions Schedio Biblio 2020 Vasilyeva Ekaterina 2022 36 essays on photographers St Petersburg Palmira P 18 24 Vasilyeva Ekaterina 2018 Eugene Atget artistic biography and mythological program International Journal of Cultural Studies No 1 30 30 38 Vasilyeva Ekaterina 2013 Eugene Atget and the legacy of the 19th century photographic school Vasilyeva E City and Shadow The image of the city in artistic photography of the 19th 20th centuries Saarbrucken Lambert Academic Publishing p 131 143 ISBN 978 3 8484 3923 2 Atget Eugene Wiegand Wilfried 1998 Eugene Atget Paris New York te Neues Publishing ISBN 978 3823803638 The World of Atget 1964 Atget s Gardens A Selection of Eugene Atget s Garden Photographs 1979 Eugene Atget A Selection of Photographs from the Collection of Musee Carnavalet Paris 1985 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eugene Atget Eugene Atget at the Museum of Modern Art Atget collection in the Eastman Museum Eugene Atget at Luminous Lint Eugene Atget and Haunted Paris Trees Parks and Architecture Atget s Portfolio at Photography now Rauschenberg rephotographs a project to reconstruct some of Atget s photographs nearly 100 years later Photography View Eugene Atget His Art Bridged Two Centuries New York Times March 10 1985 Bibliotheque numerique INHA Fonds photographique Eugene Atget de l ENSBA Estructura y armonia Ciudades y arquitecturas Tres visiones fotograficas Eugene Atget Berenice Abbott Amanda Bouchenoire Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eugene Atget amp oldid 1182167493, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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