by Albert Turoń
Nationality
French
Lifetime
1857-1927
Biography
Eugène Atget French, 1857-1927 Relatively unknown to the public during his lifetime, Eugène Atget is today an icon -- one of the most celebrated and influential photographers of the 20th century. Born near Bordeaux, Atget first directed his efforts to painting and the stage before turning to photography shortly before 1890. He is best known for his documentary scenes of Paris and Versailles, but he photographed a number of other sites as well. Atget viewed his work as a historical and aesthetic record, regarding it as documentation for use by artists. Indeed, several artists are known to have painted from his images. Using relatively unsophisticated, even outdated equipment, Atget achieved a view of French architecture and culture that is both personal and factual. Along with the rediscovery of the images of Mathew Brady in the early 20th century, the recognition of Atget's artistic accomplishments shortly before his death by Berenice Abbott, Man Ray, and others helped turn photographers away from the mannered style of pictorialism toward the visual and technical clarity of modernism. Marked by a selective and highly individual method, his is among the most widely shown, published, and recognized work in photography today. T.W.F.
Artworks
Versailles, Chaste Venus
Eugène Atget
Versailles, Fountain of Triumphant Franc...
Versailles, Fountain of Enceladus
Nymphéa
Mullein in Bloom
The Park at Sceaux [April 1925, 7a.m.]
Fountain of the L'École Polytechnique
Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Geneviève
Rue du Regard
Hôtel Cheruseau, Rue Louis en L'Ile
Trees and Roots
Clamart (Vielle Rue)
St. Cloud