ATLANTA, GA.- In 1925, photographer André Kertész (American, born Hungary, 1894-1985) arrived in Paris with little more than a camera and meager savings. Over the next three years, the young artist carved out a photographic practice that allowed him to move among the realms of amateur and professional, photojournalist and avant-garde artist, diarist and documentarian. This spring, the
High Museum of Art presents André Kertész: Postcards from Paris (Feb. 18-May 29, 2022), the first exhibition to focus exclusively on his rare cartes postales, precise prints on inexpensive yet lush postcard paper.
Organized by the Art Institute of Chicago, Postcards from Paris brings together more than 100 of these prints from collections across Europe and North America and offers insight into Kertészs early experimental years, during which he produced some of his now-iconic images and charted a new path for modern photography. The exhibition also reveals the importance of Paris as a vibrant meeting ground for international artists, who drew inspiration from each other to create fresh ways of seeing and representing the world.
We are delighted for the opportunity to share these rare prints by one of the most intriguing and groundbreaking photographers of the 20th century, said Rand Suffolk, the Highs Nancy and Holcombe T. Green, Jr., director.
Kertész was one of the most consequential photographers of the 20th century, and this exhibition focuses on his most innovative and prolific period, said Gregory Harris, the Highs Donald and Marilyn Keough Family curator of photography. He was a pioneer who mastered intimate portraiture, dynamic street photography and precise interior studies, moving effortlessly between his personal and commercial work. These distinctive carte postale prints are some of the finest examples of his iconic early photographs.
Kertész moved to Paris due to the limited opportunities in his native Hungary, and by the end of 1928, he was contributing regularly to magazines and exhibiting his work internationally alongside well-known artists such as Man Ray and Berenice Abbott. The three years between his arrival in Paris and his emergence as a major figure in modern art photography marked a period of dedicated experimentation and exploration for Kertész. During that time, he produced most of his prints on carte postale paper, turning this popular format toward artistic ends, rigorously composing images in the darkroom and making a new kind of photographic object. Postcards from Paris pays careful attention to the works as both images and objects, emphasizing their experimental composition and daringly cropped formats.
The exhibition includes vintage prints of images that would come to define Kertészs career, including Chez Mondrian (1926), an exquisitely composed scene of Piet Mondrians studio emphasizing the painters restrained geometry; Satiric Dancer (1927), uniting photography with dance and sculpture by fellow Hungarians in Paris; and Fork (1928), declaring that photography could transform even the humblest of objects into art.
Postcards from Paris is curated by Elizabeth Siegel, curator of photography and media at the Art Institute of Chicago. The exhibition is being presented in the Lucinda Weil Bunnen Photography Galleries on the Lower Level of the Highs Wieland Pavilion.