EUGENE ATGET

BIOGRAPHY

Eugène Atget (1857-1927) was an early French photographer who captured images of the rapidly disappearing elements of Paris during the waning 19th century. His straightforward yet wistful style served as an inspiration for generations of photographers, including the Surrealist Man Ray and the American photographer Berenice Abbott. “For more than 20 years by my own work and personal initiative I have gathered from all the old streets of le vieux Paris the old hotels, historic or curious houses, beautiful facades, beautiful doors, beautiful woodwork, door knockers, old fountains,” he once said. “This vast artistic and documentary collection is today complete. I can truthfully say that I possess all of Vieux Paris.”

Born on February 12, 1857, in Libourne, France, Atget was orphaned when he was five years old and was primarily raised by his grandparents. He studied briefly at the Dramatic Arts Conservatory in Paris and worked as an itinerant actor in the city before beginning his career as a commercial photographer. Atget’s clients were primarily painters and sculptors for whom he produced images of architectural details, doorways, and antiques. During his career, he seldom photographed people and instead roamed abandoned gardens or empty courtyards for his subject matter. Atget died on August 4, 1927, in Paris, France.

Today, his photographs are held in the collections of the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles, the Musée d’Orsay in Paris, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, among others.