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Opening the book on modern photography

He may not be a household name, but André Kertész is the father of photojournalism.

August 13, 2009 14:35
Reading Moore

ByMelanie Abrams , Melanie Abrams

2 min read

With his Leica camera in hand, André Kertész wandered city streets, photographing people going about their daily lives. It helped him, he felt, come to terms with being an outsider, first as a Jew in early 20th-century Hungary, then as a émigré in Paris between the wars, and then in New York.

The images he created led many of his peers to regard him as the father of photojournalism, although it needed a Museum of Modern Art retrospective in New York in 1962 to re-establish his reputation. Even now, his name is less famous than those he influenced, such as Henri Cartier Bresson, who acknowledged his importance by claiming: “We all owe him a great deal.”

A series of Kertész’s photographs on the theme of readers and reading is now on display in London, spanning his early work before the First World War to his death in 1985. Images include men, women and children perusing books, magazines and newspapers on balconies, rooftops, the beach at Cannes and even on top of a rubbish pile in Manila.

Kertész knew that by photographing people reading, he captured them at their most relaxed. As Robert Gurbo, the photographer’s former assistant and curator of his estate and foundation, says: “When people read they are transformed into the world of the book. Their body language becomes about who they are and what they are reading. They are being themselves.”