Men's Fashions, from Twenty Photographs by Eugene Atget 1856-1927
Primary
Eugene Atget
(Libourne, France, 1857–Paris, France, 1927)
Printer
Berenice Abbott
(Springfield, Ohio, 1898–Monson, Maine, 1991)
NationalityFrench, Europe
Date1925, printed 1956
MediumGelatin silver print
DimensionsSheet: 8 15/16 × 6 11/16 in. (22.7 × 17 cm)
Additional Dimension: 13 × 9 15/16 in. (33 × 25.3 cm)
Additional Dimension: 13 × 9 15/16 in. (33 × 25.3 cm)
Credit LineBlanton Museum of Art, The University of Texas at Austin, Archer M. Huntington Museum Fund, P1967.1.3
Keywords
Rights Statement
Collection AreaArt of the United States
Object numberP1967.1.3/20
On View
On viewLocations
Label Text- exhibition BMA, Gallery, A6 - Glickman Galleries
Eugène Atget produced over ten thousand photographs of France throughout his life. Atget captured Paris in meticulous detail, creating a visual record of the rapidly modernizing city in the early twentieth century through doors, courtyards, streets, museums, storefronts, and Parisians themselves. While they serve as an important record of Paris and its inhabitants in the 1900s, Atget’s images capture mundane yet uncanny moments that endeared him to the Surrealists. In Men’s Fashions, for example, the dummies—some headless—appear to inhabit the Gobelins tapestry factory reflected in the shop window.
Exhibitions
Eugene Atget
1910, printed 1956
Eugene Atget
1910-1911, printed 1956
Eugene Atget
1922, printed 1956