ANDRÉ KERTÉSZ

Details
ANDRÉ KERTÉSZ

Budafok, Hungary, (1919)

Gelatin silver print. 1939-41. Signed, titled, dated in pencil and PHOTO BY ANDRÉ KERTÉSZ credit stamp on the verso, tipped to a facsimile vellum mount. 6½ x 8 3/8in. (16.5 x 21.3cm.) Framed.
Provenance
The Estate of André Kertész
Literature
Stranger to Paris, p. 22.

Lot Essay

Early on Kertész developed an intereset and attraction to the folk tradition of Budapest. His relatives worked as farmers in the puszta, the plainland of Hungary. Kertész spent summers as a boy in Szigetbecse where he was friends with the local peasants and Gypsies. "There are no hierarchies in his country photographs...Kertész found the arrogant parochialism of many Hungarians distasteful; in fact, he treasures the fascinating diversity and cultural richness of the countryside...All these experiences enhanced a respect for craft and a sensitivity to the out-of-doors, as well as a cultural identity that would serve him well as a photographer." (Phillips et al., André Kertész, Of Paris and New York, p. 19.) Kertész's images of the Hungarian countryside show his early personal connection to and appreciation for the simple beauty of the place.