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Atget: Paris in Detail

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The works of French photographer Eugene Atget (1857-1927) can be considered as prototypes for some of the great aesthetic movements (cubism, surrealism, conceptualism) that continue to influence modern and contemporary art. His detailed visual record of Paris and its environs were sold to painters to use as source material, and later to institutions dedicated to the preservation of the city's past. The Bibliotheque des Arts Decoratifs in Paris acquired nearly 1800 poetic images of decorative details such as boiseries, door knockers, staircase balustrades, garden ornaments, and magnificent plaster work from Atget's studio.

The selection of more than 300 works exquisitely reproduced in this volume were chosen not only for their documentary record of the decorative splendors of Paris, but also for their concentration on the subtleties of form and their stunning aesthetic power. Atget's continued use of a large format view camera and glass plate negatives, allowed for bigger negatives that resulted in fine details and richly toned images. His encyclopedic purpose and the simplicity of his method are so timeless that his work still fascinates today. The poetic impassivity of the images, the detailed beauty of their subjects, and the simple juxtaposition of their proportions will be an inspiration to all those interested in design and the decorative arts as well as those interested in the history of photography.

232 pages, Hardcover

First published October 25, 2002

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49 reviews1 follower
November 16, 2011
A magnificent book filled with large beautiful reproductions of Atget's work in its decorative aspects. As the title of this book states, these pictures are details of wrought iron banisters, fireplaces, sculpture, gardens, & moldings, through the 19th century. Unlike many recent exhibits of his work these reproductions are in sharply contrasted black and white photos, not the sepia tones which are actually more accurate and more romantic. These pictures are gems of details in Paris which many tourists overlook or are too overwhelmed to take in. These images form a small part of Atget's life work: to photograph all of Paris as he knew and loved her, before she was changed for all time by modernity.
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