A major
exhibition of almost 200 photographs by Berenice Abbott goes on show at the
Fundación MAPFRE in Barcelona
“To me
photography is a means – perhaps the best means of our age – of widening
knowledge of our world. Photography is a method of education, for acquainting
people of all ages and conditions with the truth about life today,” wrote
photographer Berenice Abbott (1898-1991), in an unpublished text, Statement in
Regard to Photography Today, 1946. From portraits of elite avant-garde circles
in Paris, to rapidly-changing cityscapes of her New York City, plus a career in
science journalism, ideas of modernity pervade Abbott’s legacy.
Born in
Springfield, Ohio, in 1898, Abbott studied sculpture in New York before moving
to Paris in 1921, where she worked as an assistant at the Man Ray studio.
There, she mastered the art of photography, and in 1926 held her first solo
show at the gallery Le Sacre du Printemps in Paris, where she exhibited
portraits of the Parisian avant-garde.
When
Abbott returned to New York in 1929, she was struck by how rapidly the city was
developing. This lead to her series Changing New York, and soon after she
turned her attention to scientific phenomena and experiments, eventually
working as picture editor for Science Illustrated and inventing photographic
machines like a darkroom distorter and picture composer.
Abbott’s
long arc of work paints a portrait of modernity in the new century, a premise
on which the major new exhibition of her work at Barcelona’s Fundacion Mapfre
is based. It will show almost 200 photographs grouped into three sections,
along with a small selection of work by Eugène Atget, a great friend and
inspiration to Abbott, with 11 of his photographs developed by Abbott herself
in 1956.
Berenice
Abbott: Portraits of Modernity, on show in Barcelona. By Marigold Warner.
British Journal of Photography , February 25, 2019.
Berenice
Abbott aimed her lens at so many 20th-century subjects that her photographs
challenge us to rethink modernity itself. With this in mind, Berenice Abbott:
Portraits of Modernity at Fundación MAPFRE presents close to 200 of her
photographs, organized into three chapters. It starts with portraits of fellow
artists in Paris, then shifts to her New York City streetscapes, and concludes
with her scientific photography. By changing focus as abruptly as Abbott
herself, the exhibition adheres to her credo that photography uncovers
objective truths. “Photography doesn’t teach you how to express your emotions,”
she famously decreed, “it teaches you how to see.” As a result, it is left to
the visitor to deduce a unifying thread from her long take on modernity. To
that end, the exhibition helpfully includes hourly screenings of the
documentary Berenice Abbott: A View of the 20th Century (1992), featuring many
frank autobiographical reflections by Abbott.
Born in
1889, Abbott felt so in tune with the improvisational rhythms of the new
century that she hoped to “see out” the whole of it — and by the time she died
in 1991, she almost had. Her principal legacy is her positioning of photography
as an autonomous art form, breaking ranks with photographers like Frank Eugene
and Alfred Stieglitz, who adopted painterly techniques in an effort to bolster
its cultural prestige. Such embellishments were heresy to Abbott. She contended
that photography ought to rely on its unadulterated technical means, even if
its art is permanently “a prisoner to its time.”
But
Abbott was never prisoner to her time or place. In 1918, she left her native
Ohio and lived among writers and artists in New York’s Greenwich Village,
befriending figures like Djuna Barnes and Eugene O’Neill. Aspiring at first to
be a journalist and, later, a sculptor, Abbott learned that Paris was more
hospitable to free thinkers and artists and moved there after World War I. She
took a job developing photographs for fellow expatriate Man Ray who soon
suggested she try taking pictures herself. He paid her so poorly that she did,
and she was soon in regular demand as a photographer, opening her own studio
and becoming a leading documentarian of bohemian Paris.
Portraits
of Modernity begins at this juncture. In these early photographs, Abbott’s
training in journalism and sculptural art is apparent. She investigates surface
and shadow and imposes a monumentalizing stillness, even on some of her most
animated subjects. The prominent brow and long face of French novelist André
Gide materialize as if brightness itself has been carved from the enveloping
darkness. Ever the documentarian, Abbott transforms lighthearted or playful
scenes into neutral or impassive atmospheres. As French writer and artist Jean
Cocteau is bathed in morning light and hugging a mannequin in bed, the scene’s
bracing intimacy becomes a subdued, epicene languor.
Abbott’s
solemnity relaxes in her portraits of musicians and women artists. The American
writer Janet Flanner gazes nonchalantly, wearing a top hat festooned with two
colombina masks; the image perfectly captures the writer’s attentive, sanguine
wit. A photograph of poet Edna St. Vincent Millay, one of Abbott’s most
frequent subjects, and her close friend, brings together youthful spontaneity
and dreamlike saintliness. In another nuanced portrait, the intimidating art
patron Peggy Guggenheim smiles shyly as her pet dog lolls, seemingly overjoyed,
in her lap.
Her
photographs of the aged French photographer Eugene Atget are the most moving.
Recently widowed, Atget seems to be staring into his own mortality. His bright
eyes form a vivacious contrast to his withered frame and weary posture. In
fact, he died soon after the shoot and never lived to see Abbott’s developed
prints. But Atget would remain Abbott’s muse, as she reclaimed his style and
maintained his work. Atget’s wraithlike pictures of late-19th-century Paris
motivated Abbott to turn from portraiture to urban photography. Before leaving
Paris for good in the late 1920s, she bought his neglected estate and preserved
his legacy, archiving the works and creating prints — many of which are
included in Portraits of Modernity to underscore her commitment to Atget’s
vision.
Following
Atget’s lead, she trained her lens on New York’s rapidly modernizing
topography. Like her predecessor, she documented the hidden relation between
constructed spaces and human presence, as well as its absence, within a city
that runs according to a mysterious internal logic. Funded in part by the
Federal Art Project, these photographs literally put her on the map, resulting
in an archival commission for the Museum of the City of New York and an
accompanying book called Changing New York (1939).
She
frames New York City as an evolving marvel of engineering. Her pictures
concentrate on how old and new architectural features compete with changing
light and shifting shadows to create order within the arbitrary. Her subjects
range from Greenwich Village shop windows to sleek midtown Automats and the
warm facades of uptown brownstones.
Abbott’s
camera exhaustively documents the revival of American capitalism and the
resulting civic and state-sponsored developments in New York during the New
Deal, symbolized by the construction of the RCA Building and, more
dramatically, Rockefeller Center. The latter subject yields some of her most
memorable cityscapes: she portrays iron girders being driven into unearthed
bedrock while cranes overhead cast crisscrossing shadows on the earthbound
equipment and laborers below.
She also
documents commercial districts, from bustling warehouses and outer borough gas
stations to the confined corridors of Wall Street and sprawling waterfront
dockyards. She attends to expanding roadways and urban arteries, as she
captures soaring views from underneath trestles and across onramps of newly
constructed bridges.
Occasionally,
the uncanny intrudes. An enormous handgun suspended from a gunsmith shop seems
aimed at the street below. Another bizarre scene shows a looming statue about
to be unveiled in Times Square; it towers over the city like a bloated mummy.
Economic injustice darkens city life, too, in photographs of makeshift huts
along Houston Street, in decrepit back alleys behind “Old Law” tenement
apartment buildings, as well as in portraits of homeless men collapsed on sun-drenched
downtown sidewalks. When an editor saw these latter photos he chastised her,
saying that “nice girls” don’t go to the Bowery. She retorted, “I’m not a nice
girl. I’m a photographer. I go anywhere.”
Among
her favorite places were skyscrapers and rooftops. One of Abbott’s most famous
images, taken at the end of winter and using long exposure, portrays the city’s
office buildings as a sort of Bauhaus-engineered apiary electrified by glowing
streams of incandescent light.
Her
interest in capturing the flow of energy through physical forms likely fueled
her turn to scientific and technological photography, which began in the late
1930s and continued into the early 1960s, with early cooperation from RCA
Laboratories and, later, more sustained support from the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology.
By this
time, Abbott had long shared a home and studio with her partner Elizabeth McCausland
and had gained a public profile as a photo editor for Science Illustrated and
as an influential teacher of photography at the New School for Social Research.
Interdisciplinary work had become her forte. Representing physics,
thermodynamics, and hydraulics, her late-period photography frequently
illustrated college textbooks. This might be the most fascinating work she ever
made.
In one
close-up image, soap bubbles divulge an architectural grandeur formed from
molecular exchanges occurring between air and water; in another, curves and
hollows created from molding cheese resemble the beveled patterns in a coral
reef. A magnified photograph of penicillin makes the compound look like a
cleaved grapefruit, while a photograph from a series of experiments in physical
science shows an iridescent skeleton key bathed in a magnetic field sprinkled
with iron filings. The radiating lines and cursive waves are so precise and
harmonious that the picture verifies a transcendent order that guides energy as
it courses imperceptibly through the physical world.
Taken
together, Abbott’s wide-ranging subjects are unified by an underlying
conviction that modernity — our impulse to replace tired traditions with
original methods — aims for progress across human endeavors in the arts, urban
engineering, and science. An accomplished inventor, with several patents to her
name, Abbott retreated to a home in Maine for her final years. From there she
could watch the sun begin to set on a restless century that, despite
well-documented atrocities and nightmares, somehow constantly replenished its
optimism about modernity. From our censorious, reactionary era, we might look
back on that spirit and find much more in it than just another nostalgia trip.
Berenice
Abbott’s Optimistic Modernity. By Tim Keane. Hyperallergic , August 24, 2019.
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