At the Bulger Gallery, 1026 Queen West starting this Saturday:

"ANDRÉ KERTÉSZ
On Reading

Opening Reception: Saturday, February 7th, 2-5pm

Our exhibition highlights André Kertész's (b. Budapest, Hungary,
1894-1985) life long interest with people caught in a deeply personal,
yet universal, moment: the act of reading.

Perhaps in memory of his late father, who was a bookseller, or more
likely because of his deep understanding of the transformative nature
of the printed word, Kertész began taking pictures of people absorbed
in reading when he first started photographing in his native Hungary.
Featuring a selection of photographs taken between 1915 and 1980,
Kertész captured readers from all walks of life in such distant
locales as Tokyo, Paris, Hungary and New York, and almost every
conceivable place – on rooftops, in public parks, on crowded streets,
waiting in the wings of a school play or huddled in doorways. Both
playful and poetic, Kertész's photographs celebrate the absorptive
power and pleasure of this solitary activity.

Kertész's brilliant innovate career began in 1912 and spanned
seventy-three years. His early work revealed a finely developed vision
present from the moment he first picked up a camera. His ability to
construct lyrical images infused with wit and insight would remain a
constant throughout his long career. In 1925, Kertész moved to Paris,
where his approach to the medium helped define the look and role of
photojournalism and contemporary art in Europe. Kertész left Paris in
1936 for New York but failed to secure a position as a photojournalist
and slipped into relative obscurity. He continued to build on his
extraordinary body of work, but it was not until the mid-1970s that
Kertész was fully recognized as a seminal figure in the history of
photography. By the end of his career, Kertész was acknowledged as one
of the most inventive, influential, and prolific photographers of the
twentieth century. Revered for his images in which everyday events are
transformed into poetic visi ons, his photographs are in the
collections of museums and institutions throughout the world.

These photographs were originally featured in a book titled On
Reading, published in 1971, which helped to reestablish Kertész's
identity at a critical juncture in his career. The second edition of
this book, published by W.W. Norton & Company with a preface by
curator Robert Gurbo, was released in the fall of 2008; arriving at a
time when the continued existence of the printed word is under siege
by numerous technological advances.


FREE SATURDAY SCREENINGS at CAMERA

ON READING

3:00 PM"

cheers,
frank

-- 
"Sharpness is a bourgeois concept."  -Henri Cartier-Bresson

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