EUGÈNE ATGET (1857-1927)
PROPERTY OF JANE MAYHALL KATZ AND THE ESTATE OF LESLIE GEORGE KATZ
EUGÈNE ATGET (1857-1927)

Kiosque à journaux, square du Bon Marché, rue de Sèvres, 1910-11

细节
EUGÈNE ATGET (1857-1927)
Kiosque à journaux, square du Bon Marché, rue de Sèvres, 1910-11
arrowroot print
titled, numbered '227', annotated '17 bis' in pencil and credit stamp (on the verso)
9 x 6 7/8in. (22.7 x 17.4cm.)
来源
from the artist;
Berenice Abbott;
Jane Mayhall Katz and Leslie George Katz
出版
Abbott, The World of Atget, Horizon Press, 1964, pl. 78; Szarkowski and Hambourg, The World of Atget: Volume IV, Modern Times, The Museum of Modern Art, 1985, p. 46, pl. 10; Beaumont-Maillet, Atget Paris, Hazan, 1992, p. 516; Le Gall, Atget, Paris pittoresque, Hazan, 1998, p. 108; Adam. ed., Eugène Atget's Paris, Taschen, 2001, p. 122

拍品专文

The term 'Arrowroot print' is often used for Atget prints that could more accurately be described generically as 'matte albumen' prints. Scientific testing at the Philadelphia Museum of Art has shown that rice starch, rather than arrowroot starch, was found in all of the matte albumen prints by Atget in their collection. Whether arrowroot or rice was used as sizing is of little importance as the end result is the same, a pleasing matte surface. This image, with the vendor's disembodied head poking out between the blurred magazine covers, appeals to the same surrealist sensibility that Man Ray and others brought to Atget's work in the 1920s and led to his discovery by generations of artists. Matte albumen Atget prints of excellent quality and provenance depicting intriguing subjects such as the present lot are very rare.