Martin-Gropius-Bau in Berlin is hosting in collaboration with the Jeu de Paume in Paris a vast retrospective on the Hungarian photographer André Kertész, until September 11th. Organized in a chronological yet thematical manner, the exhibition follows the trips of the artist to Hungary, France and America, places where he would live during the course of his life, all the while concentrating on his subjects : shadows, rooftops or chimneys, as well as visual representations of sentiments like melancholy. Also present are lesser known collections : old images dating from his military service during the First World War, or Polaroids taken during the 1980s. The influence of Kertész in the birth of photojournalism is highlighted through such magazines as VU, Art et Médecine, Paris Magazine and UHU, in which he created a style oriented to transmitting to the reader certain atmospheres rather then developping a documentary discourse, as would confirm his reportage on Trappist monks of Soligny.

Born in 1894 in Budapest in the heart of a jewish family, Andor Kertész would buy his first camera at the age of 18. After the war, he settled in Paris where he came into contact with other Hungarian emigrants such as László Moholy-Nagy, Robert Capa and Brassaï, and, some time later, with the avant-garde artists of Montparnasse : Piet Mondrian, Fernand Léger, Alexander Calder, to name a few. In 1927 he had his first retrospective in the Gallery Au Sacre du Printemps, and in 1929 he would be present in the international exhibition « Film und Foto » in Stuttgart and Berlin. During this period the books Enfants (1934), Paris vu par Kertész (1934) and Nos amis les bêtes (1936) would be published. In 1936 he settles in New York, where he would remain for several decades, working for different press magazines such as House and Garden, before bringing back elan to his artistic productions around the 1960s. He passed away in 1985, leaving a collection of 100,000 negatives.

Sebastián Messina


André Kertész – Fotografien
Until September 11 2011
Martin-Gropius-Bau
Niederkirchnerstraße 7
10963 Berlin

On the occasion of the present exhibition, the publishing house Hatje Cantz published the volume « André Kertész », 360 pages, 544 photographs. ISBN 978-3-7757-2630-6