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THE PHOTOGRAPHER, A LOVER OF OLD PARIS

Eugène Atget, son cabinet de travail, 17 bis rue Campagne-Première, 14e arr., 1910 - Musée Carnavalet, Paris | Le Musée Virtuel du Vin - The Virtual Wine Museum

Rue Campagne-Première, Cabinet de travail - 1910

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Eugène Atget, son cabinet de travail, 17 bis rue Campagne-Première, 14e arr., 1910 - BHVP, Paris | Le Musée Virtuel du Vin - The Virtual Wine Museum

Rue Campagne-Première, Cabinet de travail - 1910

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Chez Eugène Atget, salon, 17 bis rue Campagne-Première, 14e arr., Paris, 1910 - Musée Carnavalet, Paris | Le Musée Virtuel du Vin - The Virtual Wine Museum

Rue Campagne-Première, Salon - 1910

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After failed attempts at becoming first an actor, then a painter, Eugène Atget moved into photography, becoming a professional photographer in 1897. Self-taught, he had been producing reference images for artists since 1890 – images of plants, landscapes and various objects. In 1899, he moved happily into the 14th arrondissement area of Montparnasse, at 17b Rue Campagne-Première – not far from the “Cité des Artistes”, which was at no. 9. A veritable village thrived here, at the heart of Rue Campagne-Première, the “Montparnasse of the Montparnos” (the term “Montparnos” referred to the artists associated with this place). 128 workshops were built here using materials recovered from the buildings of the 1889 Universal Exhibition. The Cité des Artistes would host Léonard Foujita, Giorgio de Chirico, Amedeo Modigliani, Vassili Kandinsky, Max Ernst, Joan Miró, Alberto Giacometti, and many more. Atget knew that the painters of this type of neighbourhood would lack photographic and historical documents to feed their inspiration. This was why he photograph Paris and its surroundings tirelessly, over many years. His clients? The biggest names in painting, including Kisling, Foujita, Derain, Vlaminck, Braque, Utrillo, Duchamp and Picasso.

 

While he was doing this, Atget offered himself increasingly to cultural institutions (Bibliothèque nationale de France, Musée Carnavalet, Bibliothèque historique de la Ville de Paris, Monuments historiques, etc.). These bodies were amassing large numbers of documentary photographs at the time, particularly relating to Parisian monuments. They would go on to buy thousands of Atget’s photographs.

 

With his 18x24cm box camera, Atget would meticulously photograph every ancient street and picturesque detail of the French capital – the city’s threatened buildings, its dying cottage industries – until he could write “I own the old Paris”. In so doing, he refused to photograph any trace of modernity: the Eiffel Tower and the Metro are absent from his images. Atget’s desire to lay bare the reality of the city makes him the grandfather of modern photography. It’s thanks to Atget, with his insistence on “saving what is disappearing”, that this Paris (mostly destroyed now) can come back to life before our eyes.

 

By the end of his life, Atget had taken over 8,000 photos and created 17,000 prints. Today, the largest collections of his work are in the Musée Carnavalet in Paris (9,000 prints) and MoMA in New York (5,000 prints). You can also find photos and prints at the Bibliothèque nationale de France (4,000 photos), the Getty Museum in Los Angeles, the George Eastman Museum in Rochester (formerly Man Ray’s collection) and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

Portrait d'Eugène Atget par Berenice Abbott,1927 - MoMA, New York | Le Musée Virtuel du Vin - The Virtual Wine Museum

Portrait d'Eugène Atget, Berenice Abbott, 1927

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After having discovered Eugène Atget in 1925 through Man Ray, to whom Atget had offered his “documents”, the American Berenice Abbott (who had worked as Ray’s assistant) asked Atget to pose for her in 1927. They were neighbours. With Man Ray, she lived on the same street: 31b Rue Campagne-Première. But when Berenice Abbott came to show Atget her photos, it was too late. The photographer she so admired had died shortly after the shoot. Atget died on the 4th August, aged 70, one year after his actress partner, Valentine Delafosse-Compagnon. He died at home, in poverty.

 

Berenice Abbott saved the contents of Atget’s workshop by buying it. It’s now part of the Abbott-Levey Collection at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York.

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