38 Gorgeous Photographs Of "The Old Paris"
Small market in front of the Church of Saint-Médard, Paris, 1898.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetLampshade merchant, Rue Lepic, Montmarte, Paris, circa 1899-1900.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetParisians looking at a total solar eclipse, April 17, 1912.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetPont Neuf, Paris, 1925.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetA man plays guitar at an unspecified location in Paris, 1900.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetJardin du Luxembourg, 1902.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetRue de la Montagne-Sainte-Geneviève, 1924.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetThe Palace of Versailles, 1903.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetQuai d'Anjou, 1924.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetPlace Eau-de-Robec, 1908.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetGardens of Château de Sceaux in Sceaux, a commune south of Paris, 1925.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetBar inside a cabaret, location unknown, circa 1900-11. The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetCar and two motorcycles in front of garage, Rue de Valence, Paris, 1922.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetWater lilies likely in a botanical garden of Bagatelle, a park on the outskirts of Paris, 1910.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetPath near Saint-Cloud, a commune in the western suburbs of Paris, 1923.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetButcher shop, Rue Christine, Paris, circa 1920s.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetFruit and vegetable shop, Rue Mouffetard, Paris, 1925.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetPont Marie, a bridge crossing the Seine, Paris, 1912.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetShopfront of the "Couronne d'or" (Gold Crown), Quai de Bourbon, Paris, 1922.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetStatues in Saint-Cloud, a commune in the western suburbs of Paris, circa 1915-19.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetRue du Cimitière-Saint-Benoît, Paris, 1923.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetCorset shop, Boulevard de Strasbourg, Paris, 1912. The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetOutside Paris, circa 1920s.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetGrocery display covered during the lunch hour, Rue Maître-Albert, Paris, 1912.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetReapers, Somme, 1898.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetCarousel, location unknown, 1923.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetStreet musicians, location unknown, circa 1898-1899.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetStreet paver, circa 1899-1900.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetHeadless mannequin outside a shop, circa 1926–27. The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetUnknown couple outside of a brothel, 1921.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetMannequins in shop windows, Avenue des Gobelins, Paris, 1925.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetBoutique, Marché aux Halles, Paris, 1925.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetResidential interior, Paris, 1910.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetFuneral couch, 1910.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetRagpicker's hut, location unknown, 1910.
Ragpickers made a living rummaging through refuse for salvage.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetRue St. Rustique, Montmartre, Paris, 1922.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetBasket-maker's house, outside Paris, circa 1910-1912.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène AtgetRue Laplace and Rue Valette, Paris, 1926.The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Eugène Atget
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Early 1900s Photos Of “The Old Paris” Just Before It Was Lost To Modernization View Gallery
Eugène Atget was what the French call a flâneur: an urban adventurer who finds great pleasure in the simple act of strolling through streets and parks, taking in the sights.
But Atget wasn't idle in his flânerie. He had an all-consuming appetite for the ambulatory hobby that Honoré de Balzac called "the gastronomy of the eye." Starting in 1898, Atget began photographing vieux Paris, or "Old Paris" — public spaces in the city about to be lost to urbanization.
To accomplish this, he dragged a large-format bellows camera through the streets, often beginning at dawn. (Photographer and critic John Szarkowski later called Atget's techniques "obsolescent when he adopted them, and very nearly anachronistic by the time of his death.")
But Atget didn't even want to be known as a photographer; he was instead an "author-producer" capturing and cataloging a fading scene. Not that the reclusive Atget had throngs of admirers to correct: his "documents" — as he preferred to call his photographs — were not well-known or acclaimed in his lifetime.
Atget and his documents, however, were sufficiently in demand. In 1906, the Bibliothèque Historique de la Ville de Paris, a library dedicated to the city's history, commissioned Atget to photograph the city. By the early '20s, Atget achieved financial independence by selling thousands of his negatives to various institutions.
His work later drew praise from the likes of Picasso and Matisse, while American photographers Man Ray and Berenice Abbott are credited with rescuing Atget's work from obscurity before his death in 1927. Abbott, in fact, was the first to exhibit his work outside of France and is responsible for many of Atget's existing prints.
Ray lived next to Atget in Paris for a time, once offering the now-famous flâneur his own modern camera. Atget refused. His old technology and techniques sufficed, and besides, Atget considered his work "finished" in 1920, five years before his acolytes came calling.
The gallery above is a cross-section of Eugène Atget's oeuvre, from his early, gritty work documenting inner-city street merchants and markets, to his gorgeous later work capturing the forests and gardens of the Parisian suburbs.