Versailles, Fountain of Triumphant France

Cleveland Museum of Art

Versailles, Fountain of Triumphant France

Eugène Atget

Date
1904
Medium
albumen print, gold toned
Culture
France, 20th century
Department
Photography
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

From 1901 until his death in 1927, Atget devoted much of his time to documenting châteaus and parks in and around Paris. Initially and most frequently, he was attracted to the gardens of Versailles, first working there until 1906. This intriguing detail of the Fountain of Triumphant France isolates two of its three allegorical figures: the seated representation of the French Empire behind Jean-Baptiste Tubi’s sculpture denoting Spain. The fountain was commissioned by Louis XIV to celebrate the French victory over Spain and Holland. The sharply focused composition filled with decorative and sculptural details is typical of Atget’s early photographs, which he understood to be "documents for artists"—raw material for painters, sculptors, stage designers, and craftsmen.

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