DREW WILEY
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Regardless, even the US Northwest was treated like an ignored stepchild when it came to artist recognition.
Did other countries ever have their Atget? Was there an Atget roaming the streets of eg Oslo, Shangai, Tokyo, Rome, El Cairo? If so has any of their work survived?
It should be no surprise that the most famous French novel published in these years (between 1913 and 1927) was titled Remembrance of Things Past (A la recherche du temps perdu).
I'm gonna go left field here and say that the photographer closest in spirit to Atget, i.e., who, around the same time as Atget, took the documentary nature and possibilities of the medium to its limits (for the time), albeit with a totally different subject matter, is August Sander.
Sander looks at people the same way Atget looks at doorways, staircases and iron ornements on a balcony.
Curtis? No way. He was a traveling set designer who even carried costumes with him, and was infamous for dressing up Indians in generic, non-authentic apparel, just like John Wayne movies. There were exceptions; but let's just say, ethnologists don't take his work as a reliable reference. Documentary it was not. He was romanticizing late frontier Indian culture, being commissioned to do that very thing. And he had nothing in common with Atget's compositional strategies. Don't get me wrong - I love Curtis' work and bought the best book on it I could find. But we're talking apples versus oranges here.
How about: -
Frank Sutcliffe
Though I don't follow this religion, it still pains me to see something goes down like this. :-(View of the village of Oirschot, 1943
But I'll point to the work of Wright Morris- at least in his choice of subject- his 'home place' in the throes of change.
He was a successful author as well as a fine photographer... which confused both the writers and the photographers, and earned the derogation of both, in his time. in the 1970s his work was re-assessed and found its proper place- and powerful, evocative work it is.
See "God's Country and My People" or "Photographs and Words" to begin.
I'm gonna go left field here and say that the photographer closest in spirit to Atget, i.e., who, around the same time as Atget, took the documentary nature and possibilities of the medium to its limits (for the time), albeit with a totally different subject matter, is August Sander.
Sander looks at people the same way Atget looks at doorways, staircases and iron ornements on a balcony.
Of course, no one else has (or had) Atget's sensibility or subject matter. How could they?
Once again I am uncertain what Atget has achieved here that wasn't already made by the landscape architect?
How about this?
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