Mannequin, 1925
Eugène
Atget
About this photograph :
Mannequin, 1925
Not long before his death, between 1925 and 1927, Atget dedicated a last series of photographs to the big windows of the new Parisian shops, a symbol of the commercial modernism between the wars. These storefront photographs, where reflections from the shimmering of the glass appear, held the attention of the surrealist artists in particular who saw in it the expression of sensory confusion.
About the artist :
Eugène
Atget
In spite of his fame, we don’t know much about Atget’s life. He began photography in 1888 and, about 1890, began to make self-taught photographic documents for artists. At first, he photographed landscapes and vegetation. Then about 1897-1898, at the period when the Commission of Old Paris was created, he took it upon himself to systematically photograph the old areas of Paris earmarked for disappearance, as well as the small trades, condemned by the advent of the big stores. At the end of his life, he took photographs of parks and shop windows with reflections which made him famous with the surrealist artists.
Berenice Abbott, ManRay’s assistant wrote about Atget:
« He will be remembered as a historian of urbanism, a true romantic, a lover of Paris, a Balzac of the camera, who permits us to weave together a picture of French civilization.»
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See section on Eugène Atget - 3 photograph(s)
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