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September 29, 07

ATGET EXHIBITION IN BERLIN !!!!!! YOU HAVE TO GO THERE (and show me) 28/09/07 - 06/01/08

i received this email this morning,

if you can, visit this show !

Trust me it's excellent !!!!!!!

ATGET EXHIBITION IN BERLIN

Organizer
Berliner Festspiele
An exhibition of Bibliothèque Nationale de France –
Galerie de photographie supported by Champagne Louis Roederer

Patronage
Klaus Wowereit, governing mayor of Berlin and authorized representative of the federal republic of Germany for the German-French cultural cooperation

Curators
Sylvie Aubenas and Guillaume Le Gall

On the 150th anniversary of the birth of the French photographer Eugène Atget (1857–1927) a grand retrospective of his works will open at the Martin-Gropius-Bau Berlin on 28 September 2007. The exhibition was mounted by the Bibliothèque nationale de France. A selection of 350 works from Atget’s extensive oeuvre will be on display.

Between 1897 and 1927 Atget, like no other photographer, captured the old Paris in his pictures. His shots show the city in its various facets: narrow lanes and courtyards in the historic city centre with its old buildings, of which some were soon to be demolished, magnificent palaces from the period before the French Revolution, bridges and quays on the banks of the Seine, and shops with their window displays. He photographed stairwells and architectural details on the façades and took pictures of the interiors of apartments. His interest also extended to the environs of Paris.

He produced timeless views of the parks of Versailles, Saint-Cloud and Sceaux. In addition to architecture and the urban environment he also photographed street-hawkers, small tradesmen, rag collectors and prostitutes as well as fairs and popular amusements in the various districts. The outlying districts and peripheral areas, in which the poor and homeless sought shelter, also furnished him with pictorial motifs.

Atget, who had begun his career as an actor and tried his luck as a painter without success, did not begin to work as a photographer until 1888. He originally offered his pictures, which he called “documents pour artistes”, as originals for artists and craftsmen to work from. From 1898 onwards he increasingly devoted himself to the systematic documentation of the buildings that bore witness to the period before 1789. The photographs were bought by institutions like the Bibliothèque historique de la Ville de Paris, the Bibliothèque nationale, and museums. His activity came at a time when there was a general awareness that Modernism was ushering in a new era. Hence the efforts of various institutions to have a visual record of the old Paris as it was before it underwent its architectural transformation.

Atget’s pictures are distinguished from those of his colleagues, who kept to a strictly documentary approach, by their wealth of motifs and originality of design. He chose his own subjects, often employing strong light contrasts, shadows and overlapping forms, which lend his pictures plasticity. He used a heavy plate camera, a tripod and mirror-image negatives with an 18x24-centimetre format. His equipment – which he took with him everywhere – weighed about 20 kilograms.

In the mid-1920s Atget was discovered by the artists of the young avant-garde. Man Ray, a fellow resident of Montparnasse, bought about forty photographs and included four of them in his 1926 publication La Révolution surréaliste. Man Ray’s young assistant, the photographer Berenice Abbott, visited Atget on several occasions and bought prints from him. After his death in 1927 she acquired about 1,500 negatives and 10,000 of the prints remaining in the studio and took them to the U.S. where, together with the gallery owner Julien Levy, she devoted herself for forty years to the task of making this unique oeuvre known. It is thanks to her that Atget’s photographs exercised a considerable influence on American photographers, such as Walker Evans or Lee Friedlander.

In 1968 Berenice Abbott sold her collection to the Museum of Modern Art in New York, which in the period between 1981 and 1985 published four catalogues compiled by John Szarkowski and Maria Morris Hambourg. In France people like Robert Desnos and Pierre Mac Orlan had tried in the late 1920s and early 1930s to make Atget’s oeuvre known to a wider public. In his 1931 history of photography Walter Benjamin praised Atget as a precursor of surrealist photography, thus paving the way for his recognition in Germany.

The exhibition in the Martin-Gropius-Bau comprises seven chapters. A particular highlight may be seen in the albums compiled by Atget himself on various themes, such as Parisian apartments, shop windows, and fortifications. Most of the photographs come from the holdings of the Bibliothèque nationale de France and other public and private collections in France and abroad (Musée Carnavalet, Bibliothèque historique de la Ville de Paris, Musée d’Orsay, Bibliothèque des Arts décoratifs, Museum of Modern Art of New York, Collection Première Heure, Collection Thérond and others).

Saint-Cloud, 1922 © BnF, département des Estampes et de la photographie

Catalogue
Eugène Atget. Retrospective
Museum’s edition:
ISBN 9783-89479-380-7
€ 29.90

Bookshop edition:
ISBN 10: 3-89479-379-1
ISBN 13: 978-3-89479-379-1
€ 49.90

Admission
€ 7.00 | € 5.00 reduced
Family Ticket € 14.00
Groups (from 10 pers.) € 5.00 p.p.

Guided Tours for the Public (in German)
Sunday at 16:00 hrs
€ 3.00 plus admission € 5.00
Tours for Groups
€ 50.00 (60 min.) plus admission of € 5.00

Tours for school classes
€ 40.00 (60 min.) plus reduced admission of € 3.00

Information and Registration
Museumsinformation Berlin
Phone +49 (0)30 247 49-888
Fax +49 (0)30 247 49-883
E-mail: museumsinformation@kulturprojekte-berlin.de
www.kulturprojekte-berlin.de

 

Imprint/Impressum:

Torstr. 218, 10115 Berlin

Editor/Herausgeberin: Claudia Stein

T +49 (0)30 24 34 27 80
F +49 (0)30 24 34 27 89
contact@photography-now.com

and if you want to buy me a book of his work

it'll be a pleasure !

Shine on :D

© Published at 09:36 / 8 comments / 210 visits
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September 29, 07

test follow newsletter

this is a newsletter i've receive, and forward to my ipernity blog

it take 7 hours to the mail to come from my box to here, but it arrived... ;)

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: photography-now. com <news@photography-now.com>
Date: Sep 27, 2007 12:51 PM
Subject: Bert Teunissen: Domestic Landscapes - Museum Haus Esters, Krefeld
To:

e-Announcement

Bert Teunissen, Mazouco #1, 26/3/2002 13:05

Bert Teunissen Domestic Landscapes

A Portrait of Europeans at Home

30 September 2007 - 10 February 2008

Museum Haus Lange und Haus Esters
Wilhelmshofallee 91-97, 47798 Krefeld
Germany
T: +49 (0)2151 . 975580
F: +49 (0)2151 . 97558222
kunstmuseen@krefeld.de
www.krefeld.de/kunstmuseen
Tues-Sun 11am-5pm

 

 


Bert Teunissen, Estremoz # 4, 27/3/2002 12:36

Domestic Landscapes ­ A Portrait of Europeans at Home

One day in 1996 while visiting Castelnau in the south of France, the Dutch photographer Bert Teunissen (born 1959 in Ruurlo) chanced upon an old café where the sunlight on the veranda was shining into a large kitchen with red and white floor tiles. Fitted out with simple furniture and an open hearth, the atmosphere in this room instantly conjured up the rooms of his childhood, and the house he was forced to leave at the age of nine because it was to be demolished. The photograph of the old lady who has assumed her place in the middle of this ambience was to be first of a sustained series that has now occupied the photographer for over ten years and grown to number more than 350 works.

The title Domestic Landscapes points not only to the almost panoramic format of the works, which always show a whole, but also to the kinds of rooms that are formed by a specially cultivated domestic setting, in which the protagonists spend the majority of their lives: living rooms, kitchens, work rooms. Since Castelnau, Teunissen has set out to find more such rooms, which distinguish themselves in that they all manage with natural daylight, having been built before electric lighting was properly installed. In the meantime, this search has taken the photographer to nine European countries.

In point of fact there can be no mistaking the regional differences in the iconography of the everyday objects. It is also evident that the things that are grouped around the inhabitants of these rooms have long since established their own set places in these domestic landscapes. They are unshakeable elements of an ambience that conveys a duration that cannot be thought of in linear terms, but comes from the constant repetition of daily routine. In keeping with this, Teunissen's photographs may be compared with the paintings of Vermeer or Pieter de Hooch. The inhabitants, mostly older people, look at us with calm composure, their gazes containing the amassed experience of life spent far from the metropolises. Teunissen looks for these gazes, for they mark the spiritual middle point from which the cohesion of the ambience radiates.

As clearly as the photographs describe the regional differences, it is just as surprising how much light they cast on the points in common of a generation in Europe that was born before World War II, and that helped to construct the new Europe. Rooted in country life ­ and worlds apart from the burgeoning EU farming regulations - it is also a generation on the verge of disappearance; their children and grandchildren have long since made their homes elsewhere and adjusted to the globalised economy. Seen in this light, Teunissen's series Domestic Landscapes is a priceless archive of European life prior to globalisation, which is etched into the collective memory of our times.

For Theunissen's first-ever exhibition in Germany, some 60 photographic works will be exhibited in Haus Esters; a richly illustrated catalogue will be published for the occasion by Kerber Verlag, Bielefeld, with texts by Saskia Asser and Bert Teunissen. The exhibition has been supported by the Consulate General of the Netherlands in Berlin.
Theunissen's archive can be viewed at www.bertteunissen.com


Bert Teunissen, Pino del Oro #5, 25/2/2005 13:48

Imprint/Impressum:

Torstr. 218, 10115 Berlin

Editor/Herausgeberin: Claudia Stein

T +49 (0)30 24 34 27 80
F +49 (0)30 24 34 27 89
contact@photography-now.com

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Newsletter was sent to joe.le.trembleur@gmail.com

© 27.09.2007 Photography-now
www.photography-now.com



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