Traveling Exhibitions

 

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American Art and Artists

Posing Beauty In
African American Culture

Sally Mann:
The Family and The Land

Paul Outerbridge:
New Color Photographs
from Mexico and California

Stefan Sagmeister: Things I have learned in my life

Yosuf Karsh:
Regarding Heroes


Modern/Contemporary Art

Uncanny Likeness: The
Contemporary Self-Portrait

Artists, Poets & Intimates:
Portraits of a Life
by Françoise Gilot

Modern Photography of the
Russian Avant-Garde

Almost Alice: New Illustrations of Wonderland by Maggie Taylor

The Great Picture

Cuba Avant-Garde:
Contemporary Cuban Art from the Farber Collection

Book of Lies:
Volumes I, II, and III

André Kertész: On Reading


Artist Retrospectives

SAGA: The Journey of
Arno Rafael Minkkinen
Thirty-Five Years of Photographs


Architecture/Decorative Art

Peter Shire: Chairs

Julius Shulman:
Desert Modern

Hollyock House and
Olive Hill:
Frank Lloyd Wright and
Edmund Teske


History and Culture

E. O. Hoppé:
The Indian Subcontinent
on the Cusp of Change

The Black & White Fifties:
South Africa Photographs by Jurgen Schadeberg

number of works:
104

frame sizes:
20 x 16 and 16 x 20 inches
(40 x 50 and 50 x 40 cm)

space requirements:
appx 350 linear feet
(107 linear meters)

tour dates:
Fall 2008 through 2011

participation fee:
$12,500 for 6–8 weeks

support materials:
publication, W.W.Norton, 2007

see booking information

 


André Kertész: On Reading

Organized by the Museum of Contemporary Photography
Columbia College, Chicago


Henri Cartier-Bresson once said of himself, Robert Capa, and Brassaï, that, “Whatever we have done, Kertész did first.” He was referring to the legendary Hungarian photographer André Kertész, a prominent member of Cartier-Bresson’s circle in 1920s Paris. Kertész’s influence continued well into the 1970s, affecting another generation that included Lisette Model, Berenice Abbott, Helen Levitt, Robert Frank, Garry Winogrand, and Lee Fiedlander, among many others.

On Reading, a series of photographs made by Kertész in Hungary, France, and the United States over a fifty year period, illustrates his penchant for the poetry and choreography of life in public and also private moments at home, examining the power of reading as a universal pleasure. Balanced between geometric composition and playful observation, it is easy to understand how these glimpses of everyday people and places changed the course of photographic art.

Kertész (American, born Austria-Hungary, 1894–1985) began taking photographs in Budapest in 1912. He was drafted into the Austro-Hungarian Army where he volunteered for service at the Polish and Russian fronts. Wounded in 1915, he returned to Budapest before moving to Paris in 1925. Kertész circulated among avant-garde literary and artistic groups and embraced the deep culture of Paris between the World Wars. He also participated in the New Vision movement, based on the quickness of the new portable Leica camera as well as German progressive artist Lászó-Moholy-Nagy’s call for a new visual literacy based on photography. With the rise of Hitler and the Nazis, many from the Parisian community took their discoveries to America. Kertész moved with his wife, Elisabeth, to New York in 1936 and there worked as an artist and commercial photographer for the rest of his life, receiving little recognition for his contributions before his untimely death.


Image:
New York (boy eating ice cream on pile of newspapers), 1944.
© Courtesy Estate of André Kertész/Higher Pictures 2007

 

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