"Documents pour artistes" gets its name from the sign outside Atget's studio door, which declared his modest ambition to create documents for other artists to use as source material in their own work. More than 100 photographs are presented in six groups, demonstrating Atget's sustained attention to certain motifs or locations and his consistently inventive and elegant methods of rendering the complexity of the three-dimensional world on a flat, rectangular plate.
curated by Sarah Hermanson Meister
Eugène Atget: “Documents pour artistes"
presents six
fresh and highly focused cross sections of the career of master photographer Eugène Atget
(French, 1857–1927), drawn exclusively from The Museum of Modern Art’s unparalleled holdings
of his work.
The exhibition, on view at MoMA from February 6 through April 9, 2012, gets its name
from the sign outside Atget’s studio door, which declared his modest ambition to create
documents for other artists to use as source material in their own work. Whether exploring Paris’s
fifth arrondissement across several decades, or the decayed grandeur of parks at Sceaux in a
remarkable creative outburst at the twilight of his career, Atget’s lens captured the essence of his
chosen subject with increasing complexity and sensitivity. Also featured are Atget’s photographs
made in the Luxembourg gardens; his urban and rural courtyards; his pictures of select Parisian
types; and his photographs of mannequins, store windows, and street fairs, which deeply
appealed to Surrealist artists living in Paris after the First World War.
The exhibition is organized
by Sarah Hermanson Meister, Curator, Department of Photography, The Museum of Modern Art.
Atget made more than 8,500 pictures of Paris and its environs in a career that spanned
over 30 years, from the late-19th century until his death. To facilitate access to this vast body of
work for himself and his clients, he organized his photographs into discrete series, a model that
guides the organization of this exhibition. More than 100 photographs are presented in six groups,
demonstrating Atget’s sustained attention to certain motifs or locations and his consistently
inventive and elegant methods of rendering the complexity of the three-dimensional world on a
flat, rectangular plate.
With seemingly inexhaustible curiosity, Atget photographed the streets of Paris. Eschewing
picture-postcard views, and, remarkably, never once photographing the Eiffel Tower, he instead
focused on the fabric of the city, taking pictures along the Seine, in every arrondissement, and in
the ―zone‖ outside the fortified wall that encompassed Paris at the time. His photographs of the
fifth arrondissement are typical of this approach, and include facades of individual buildings (both
notable and anonymous), meandering streetscapes, details of stonework and ironwork, churches,
and the occasional monument.
Between March and June 1925, Atget made 66 photographs in the abandoned Parc de
Sceaux, on the outskirts of Paris, almost half of which are on view in this exhibition. His approach
was confident and personal, even quixotic, and his notations of the time of day for certain
exposures read almost like diary entries. These photographs have long been recognized as among
Atget’s finest, and this is the first opportunity for audiences outside of France to appreciate the full
diversity and richness of this accomplishment.
Atget photographed the Jardin de Luxembourg more than any other Parisian park, likely
reflecting his preference for its character and its proximity to his home and studio on rue
Campagne-Première in Montparnasse. His early photographs there tend to capture human
activity—children with their governesses or men conversing in the shade—but this gave way to a
more focused exploration of the garden’s botanical and sculptural components following the First
World War, and culminated in studies that delicately balance masses of light and shadow, as is
typical of Atget’s late work.
Atget firmly resisted public association with the Surrealists, yet his work—in particular his
photographs of shop windows, mannequins, and the street fairs around Paris—captured the eye of
artists with decidedly avant-garde inclinations, such as Man Ray and Tristan Tzara. Man Ray lived
down the street from Atget, and the young American photographer Berenice Abbott, while working
as Man Ray’s studio assistant, made Atget’s acquaintance in the mid-1920s—a relationship that
ultimately brought the contents of Atget’s studio at the time of his death to MoMA, almost 40
years later.
Atget clearly relished the metaphorical and physical aspects of the courtyard—a space that
hovers between public and private, interior and exterior—and he photographed scores of them,
both rural and urban. This exhibition marks the first time these pictures have been grouped
together, allowing the public to appreciate previously unexplored aspects of the Abbott-Levy
Collection, which includes prints of nearly 5,000 different images.
Only a tiny fraction of the negatives Atget exposed during his lifetime are photographs of
people, yet they have attracted attention disproportionate to their number. With few exceptions,
this segment of his creative output can be divided into three types: street merchants (petits
métiers); ragpickers (chiffonniers) or Romanies (romanichels, or Gypsies), who lived in
impermanent structures just outside the fortified wall surrounding Paris; and prostitutes. As with
each section of this exhibition, Atget’s career is represented by the finest prints drawn from
critically distinct and essential aspects of his practice, allowing a fresh appreciation of
photography’s first modern master.
Press Contacts:
Daniela Stigh, 212-708-9747 or daniela_stigh@moma.org
Press Viewing: Friday, February 3, 2012, 9:30 am.m to 10:30 a.m. Walk-through with Sarah Meister beginning at 9:45 a.m. Check in at The Ronald S. and Jo Carole Lauder Building, 11 West 53 Street. RSVP: (212) 708-9431 or pressoffice@moma.org.
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