André Kertész

André Kertész: The Polaroids

Introduction by Robert Gurbo

A powerful collection of the luminous last work by one of the true giants of twentieth-century photography.

After the death of his wife, André Kertész consoled himself by taking up a new camera, the Polaroid SX70. As with earlier equipment, he mastered the camera and produced a provocative body of work that both honored his wife and lifted him out of depression.

Here Kertész dips into his reserves one last time, tapping new people, ideas, and tools to generate a whole new body of work through which he transforms from a broken man into a youthful artist. Taken in his apartment just north of New York City’s Washington Square, many of these photographs were shot either from his window or in the windowsill. We see a fertile mind at work, combining personal objects into striking still lifes set against cityscape backgrounds, reflected and transformed in glass surfaces. Almost entirely unpublished work, these photographs are a testament to the genius of the photographer’s eye as manifested in the simple Polaroid.


Robert Gurbo is the curator of the André Kertész estate and the editor of André Kertész: The Early Years. He lives in New York City.

André Kertész: The Polaroids book jacket

Also Available:

André Kertész: The Early Years

André Kertész: The Early Years jacket cover


Video:

Kertész discusses his polaroid photography on the BBC series Master Photographers


November 2007 / hardcover / ISBN 978-0-393-06564-0
6" x 7" / 128 pages / Photography
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