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Street Paver LACMA M.2008.40.154.12

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File:Street_Paver_LACMA_M.2008.40.154.12.jpg ) .Description..Title.Street Paver..Description..: France, 1956.: Photographs.: Silver (gold-toned).: Mount: 13 x 10.: The Marjorie and Leonard Vernon Collection, gift of The Annenberg Foundation, acquired from Carol Vernon and Robert Turbin (M.2008.40.154.12).: [photography Photography]..Accession number.M.2008.40.154.12..Artist.{{creator: Eugène Atget}}..Date.{{before|1927}}, 1956 publication..ma-35677027-O3.jpg.216566..Institution.{{Institution: Los Angeles County Museum of Art}}..Permission.License.Public domain LACMA..{{PD-70}}.Photography in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.Images from LACMA uploaded by Fæ.Photographs of Paris by Eugène Atget

Los Angeles County Museum of Art released at least 24,000 images into the public domain. The art objects in this collection are in this category. Today LACMA is the largest art museum in the western United States, with a collection that includes nearly 130,000 objects dating from antiquity to the present, encompassing the geographic world and nearly the entire history of art.

Eugène Atget, a pioneer of documentary photography, was born 12 February 1857 in Libourne, France. His father, carriage builder died when he was five years old, and mother died shortly after. In Paris, in 1878, he was drafted for military service and was expelled from drama school because he could attend class only part-time. He became an actor with a traveling group, performing in the Paris suburbs. Later he gave up acting because of an infection of his vocal cords and took up painting in a province without success. In 1888 he took his first photographs. In 1890, Atget moved back to Paris and became a professional photographer, selling his works to artists: studies for painters, architects, and stage designers. It was not until 1897 that Atget started a project he would continue for the rest of his life: Old Paris. Atget photographed Paris with a large-format wooden camera with a rapid rectilinear lens. The images were exposed and developed as 18x24cm glass dry plates. While being a photographer Atget still also called himself an actor, giving lectures and readings. Starting in 1898, institutions such as the Musée Carnavalet and the Bibliothèque Historique de la Ville de Paris bought his photographs and commissioned him to systematically photograph old buildings in Paris. In 1920–21, he sold thousands of his negatives to institutions. Financially independent, he took up photographing the parks of Versailles, Saint-Cloud, and Sceaux and produced a series of photographs of prostitutes. Atget had published almost no work before "his genius was first recognized" by Man Ray and Berenice Abbott, two young American photographers working in Paris at the time. When Berenice Abbott reportedly asked him if the French appreciated his art, he responded, "No, only young foreigners." His death went largely unnoticed at the time outside the circle of curators who had bought his albums and kept them interred, mostly unseen. Atget never said or wrote anything about his work, thus leaving no artistic statements.

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photography in the los angeles county museum of art photographs of paris by eugene atget m 2008 40 154 12 primary lacma atget paris glass negatives dry plate negatives early photography 19th century paris paris france images for editing nga french art
date_range

Date

1850 - 1900
collections

in collections

Los Angeles County Museum of Art

Los Angeles County Museum of Art Public Domain Collection

Eugène Atget

Photographic record of nineteenth-century Paris just as it was being dramatically transformed.
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Source

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC
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Link

https://commons.wikimedia.org/
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Public Domain

label_outline Explore Photography In The Los Angeles County Museum Of Art, Atget, 19th Century Paris

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photography in the los angeles county museum of art photographs of paris by eugene atget m 2008 40 154 12 primary lacma atget paris glass negatives dry plate negatives early photography 19th century paris paris france images for editing nga french art