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1894 - 1985

Kort om kunstneren

  • Copyright status: Under copyright
  • Art period: Modern
  • Born: 1894, Budapest, Hungary
  • Top-ranked work: Chez Mondrian, Paris
  • Nationality: Hungary
  • Died: 1985
  • Vis flere…
  • Also known as:
    • andre kertesz
    • andor kertesz
  • Lifespan: 91 years
  • Top 3 works: Chez Mondrian, Paris
  • Works on APS: 1
  • Museums on APS:
    • Boca Raton Museum of Art
    • Boca Raton Museum of Art
    • Boca Raton Museum of Art
    • Boca Raton Museum of Art
    • Boca Raton Museum of Art

Kunstquiz

Der er kun ét korrekt svar på hvert spørgsmål.

Spørgsmål 1:
Where was André Kertész born?
Spørgsmål 2:
What magazine did André Kertész work for early in his career?
Spørgsmål 3:
In what year did André Kertész move to Paris?
Spørgsmål 4:
What artistic movement was André Kertész associated with?
Spørgsmål 5:
Which institution awarded André Kertész the Légion d’honneur?

The Poetic Eye: The Life and Vision of André Kertész

To look through the lens of André Kertész is to experience the world not merely as a collection of objects, but as a profound tapestry of feeling. Born Andor Kertész in 1894 amidst the vibrant yet turbulent atmosphere of Budapest, Hungary, he possessed an innate sensitivity that would eventually redefine the boundaries of photography. While his family envisioned a more conventional path for him—one involving the steady, predictable world of stockbroking—Kertész was drawn to the ephemeral beauty of the moment. An autodidact by nature, he mastered the camera through tireless self-teaching, developing an intuitive grasp of light and shadow that bypassed technical rigidity in favor of emotional resonance. His early years were marked by the intimate documentation of Hungarian life, capturing the quiet dignity of the countryside and the raw, unvarnished reality of existence behind the battle lines of World War I.

The trajectory of Kertész’s artistry shifted irrevocably in 1925 when he arrived in Paris, a city then pulsating with the avant-garde energy of the Dada movement. It was here that his unique photographic idiom truly began to flourish. Immersed in a community of immigrant intellectuals and artists, he became a master of the 35mm format, utilizing its portability to capture the spontaneous pulse of urban life. His work during this French period was characterized by a breathtaking ability to find extraordinary beauty within the ordinary. He did not merely document the streets; he choreographed them, using unorthodox camera angles and masterful compositions to reveal the hidden poetry in chance juxtaposponitions. Whether photographing the legendary Piet Mondrian or the quiet corners of a Parisian café, Kertész sought to create images that were as direct and unmanipulated as a reflection in a mirror.

A Journey Through Light and Displacement

As history moved with heavy footsteps, so too did Kertész. The rising shadow of German persecution forced him to flee Europe in 1936, leading him to the sprawling, overwhelming metropolis of New York City. This transition from the intimate, storied streets of Paris to the monumental scale of Manhattan introduced a new layer of complexity to his work: a profound sense of alienation intertwined with awe. In the United States, Kertess recorded the tension of the modern age, capturing both the frenetic energy of the American dream and the lonely isolation of the immigrant experience. His photography became a vessel for navigating this duality, blending the spontaneous spirit of street photography with a sophisticated, almost surrealist understanding of form.

Despite his immense talent, Kertész’s journey was not without its struggles for recognition. For much of his career, his groundbreaking contributions to the photo essay and his innovative use of composition were overlooked by a mainstream that favored more traditional, literal documentary styles. It was not until decades later, through pivotal retrospectives such as John Szarkowski’s 1964 exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, that the world truly began to grasp his significance. He had been a pioneer of a purely photographic language—one that celebrated the unposed and the deeply human.

The legacy of André Kertész remains an enduring testament to the power of observation. His life’s work serves as a bridge between the documentary impulse and fine art, proving that the camera can be more than a recording device; it can be a tool for profound empathy. Through his eyes, we learn that:

  • The significance of the everyday: He taught us that no moment is too small to be sacred.
  • The mastery of composition: His use of light and angle transformed mundane scenes into timeless icons.
  • The emotional truth of photography: He famously believed that one does not simply see what they photograph, but feels it.

Today, Kertész stands as a titan of twentieth-century photography, an artist whose work continues to inspire anyone who seeks to find the extraordinary within the ordinary.




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