Cabaret de l'Homme Armé, Rue des Blancs-Manteaux

Art Institute of Chicago

Cabaret de l'Homme Armé, Rue des Blancs-Manteaux

Jean-Eugène-Auguste Atget

Date
1900
Medium
Albumen print
Culture
France
Department
Photography and Media
Institution
Art Institute of Chicago

Eugène Atget systematically photographed traditional establishments and vernacular settings in Paris—fundamental aspects of the city under threat from new construction and industrialization. Successful before World War I as a purveyor of “Old Paris” to libraries and artists, in his final years (and posthumously) he became a cult favorite of two specific and influential sets—European Surrealists and American documentarians. Atget included this early image of a cabaret in a 1913 album of 60 images called Signs and Old Shops in Paris. He focused here equally on the emblem of “the armed man”—a title (and a tavern) dating to the medieval crusades, rendered in word and image to assure its familiarity to a partially illiterate clientele—and on the maitre d’, who gazes back through a glass window that also reflects, like a ghost, the likeness of the photographer himself.

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Object type
AAT300046300

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