André Kertész
André Kertész
The Early Years
Foreword by Bruce Silverstein
Introduction by Robert Gurbo
A visual time capsule of the pivotal
photographer and his place in history.
ANDRÉ KERTÉSZ (1894?1985) was one of the
most inventive, influential, and prolific photographers
in the medium's history. His combination of Modernist
vision and poetic wit defined a vocabulary that
generations of photographers have continued to use.
Kertész's iconic images of 1920s Paris, such as "Chez
Mondrian" and "Satiric Dancer" and his later images
from New York??"Melancholic Tulip," "Washington
Square"??have seeped into contemporary culture,
and yet Kertész maintained that the real roots of his
work were in Hungary.
This book, the first completely dedicated to
Kertész's early Hungarian prints, offers a unique window
on the origins of genius. Ninety images, selected
from more than 1,000 contact prints in the artist's
estate, are meticulously reproduced to actual size,
revealing the explosive cultural context of early
twentieth-century Hungary. A treasured addition to
any photography library, André Kertész: The Early Years is
a rare opportunity to witness the beginnings of a
great artist.
BRUCE SILVERSTEIN is the founder of the
Bruce Silverstein Gallery in New York, representatives
of Kertész's work. ROBERT GURBO
is curator of the Estate of André Kertész.
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