Eugène Atget’s legacy continues to resonate through the history of photography, and a new exhibition invites visitors to reconsider how his reputation was shaped long after his lifetime. Centered on the remarkable influence of
Berenice Abbott, the presentation reveals how her dedication, scholarship, and advocacy helped secure Atget’s place as a major figure in modern photography. Through carefully selected prints and archival material, the exhibition traces how Abbott’s efforts brought renewed attention to a body of work that might otherwise have remained overlooked.
Atget’s photographs, created between the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, capture a Paris caught between tradition and transformation. He wandered the city with his cumbersome equipment, recording storefronts, courtyards, gardens, and tradespeople in images characterized by quiet clarity and atmospheric light. His scenes often appear suspended in time, offering a visual record of districts soon swept away by modernization. Architects, painters, and designers once relied on his pictures as references, yet today viewers find in them a poetic evocation of a Paris that no longer exists.
The exhibition places special emphasis on Atget’s singular way of looking. His views, expansive yet attentive to detail, reveal the subtle rhythms of daily life. Whether depicting modest workshops or elegant façades, his compositions suggest both the charm and fragility of a city in transition. It was this sensitivity that captivated avant-garde artists such as
Man Ray, who recognized in Atget’s images an unexpected affinity with emerging modernist ideas.
After Atget’s death, Abbott recognized the significance of his archive and devoted years to preserving, cataloging, and promoting it. Her writings, exhibitions, and unwavering commitment ensured that Atget’s work reached museums, scholars, and the wider public. Thanks to her efforts, he is now celebrated as a foundational figure whose vision shaped the course of twentieth-century photography.
Image:
Eugène Atget, Hôtel du Marquis de Lagrange, 4 et 6 Rue de Braque, 1901 (printed 1901–27). International Center of Photography, Gift of Caryl and Israel Englander, 2008 (2008.111.20)