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Paris boutique. C. 1985. By Paul Goldfinger

Paris boutique. c. 1985. By Paul Goldfinger

 

By Paul Goldfinger, MD, Editor.   Blogfinger.net

 

Eugéne Atget (1857-1927) was a French photographer who received a commission in 1906 to document the buildings of old Paris.  He took thousands of photos, but his work was largely ignored. Meanwhile, many of those historic structures were destroyed.

In 1925, the American photographer Berenice Abbott* (1898-1991)  discovered a trove of Atget’s work and she popularized those images. Many great artists were influenced by Atget, including Matisse and Picasso. That is ironic since painting has long held a lofty position among the visual arts, while fine art photographers have sought respect in the arts community.

 

Eugene Atget. Paris. c 1910.

 

Atget died penniless. But his work is greatly admired today. Someone gave me a book of his Paris photos. That book is designed to be precisely the size of an old paving stone from the cobbled streets of old Paris.  Atget was photographing buildings and streets, so what made his images so special?

I  had the opportunity to ask that question of a professor of photography from  the Savannah School of the Arts.  He said, “It’s where you stand.”  In other words, the composition of a photograph is so important in creating an image that is emotionally appealing while another photo of the same structure will just be ordinary.

When I  visited Paris some years ago, I tried to emulate Atget in taking street shots, mostly around the left bank. The one above has never been shown before, but now I can re-visit old photographs through the magic of  my digital negative scanner. I love the idea of taking the old technology (a negative strip) and then digitizing an image and trying to make it look like an old darkroom print.

Note:  In Paris, they have worked hard over many years to preserve their architecture. One time I came upon a total rebuild of a house, where only the facade was retained, and everything behind it was newly constructed. On the other hand, you can see housing there that has been occupied for three hundred years or more.

As for Berenice Abbott,* I can see why she liked Atget’s work–she became famous for photographing old New York City.

 

Hardware store on the Bowery in 1938 by Berenice Abbott.

Hardware store on the Bowery in 1938 by Berenice Abbott.

 

JULIETTE GRECO  From the movie An Education.

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Ocean Grove. Lake Avenue. September 30, 2016 By Paul Goldfinger ©

Ocean Grove,  Lake Avenue. September 30, 2016.  By Paul Goldfinger ©     This image was inspired by Paul Strand’s  1916 photo “The White Fence.”

 

 

DINAH WASHINGTON:  “Though spring is here, to me it’s still September…in the rain.”

 

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Central Park. By Paul Goldfinger. NYC Street Series. ©

Central Park. 2013.  By Paul Goldfinger. NYC Street Series. ©  Click image once for larger version.

 

JOHN BARRY   From the motion picture “Somewhere in Time”

 

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Central Park. c. 1970. Paul Goldfinger ©   NYC Street Series.

 

VICTOR GARBER

 

From Sweeney Todd, the Demon Barber of Fleet Street.  Broadway cast. Stephen Sondheim

“Johanna.”

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St. Remy, Provence, France. Photograph by  Paul Goldfinger.

 

This is an inn in France.  You can have a gourmet dinner there.  France has received some bad publicity lately, but there is no reason now to worry about their food or their wines or their culture..

In Paris stay on the left bank and walk all over.  Do some research.  That’s how we found this place in Provence..

 

Don’t go on a tour and don’t fail to wander around to find meals.  Go to the local markets and create your own dinner. You can even picnic in some vineyards.   And look for little bistros with just a few tables and  a few specialties on the menu—maybe they will write the choices on a blackboard or a handwritten piece of paper.

 

Juliette Gréco.      “Sous Le Ciel De Paris.”   Perhaps you were expecting Edith Piaf.    But M. Gréco can sing about the Paris skies also.  It’s from a French movie.

 

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Paul Goldfinger photograph. Martha’s Vineyard.  Click to enlarge.  Silver gelatin darkroom print by P.G.   Blogfinger.net

 

 

BOB DYLAN.  From his album Triplicate.

 

“When the World Was Young.”

 

 

 

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By Paul Goldfinger, Editor @Blogfinger

Frank Lloyd Wright designed the Kaufmann residence in 1935 for a family from Philadelphia.  It is a marvelous place to visit. Located in a woodsy area in Mill Run, southwest Pennsylvania, it has recently undergone restoration.  Read about it. See link below.

When we went there, there were many photographers. It is considered one of the most important works of American architecture. We learned that Wright designed all the furniture inside and he even wanted to design the clothes for the lady of the house.    Wikipedia on Falling Water

 

Falling Water. Photo by Paul Goldfinger. © Click left for bigger view.

Fallingwater. Photo by Paul Goldfinger. © Click left for bigger view. Reposted from 2013.

 

 

ART GARFUNKEL.   “So Long, Frank Lloyd Wright.”   This song was released in 1970.

 

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Gasparilla Island. Florida.Paul Goldfinger photo. 20124 ©

Gasparilla Island. Florida.Paul Goldfinger photo. 2014     Click to enlarge.

 

RONALD NALDI   This is a Neapolitan song recorded by Mr. Naldi. (Ocean Grove’s tenor). “A Vuccella”  is from Vol II of an album of Italian songs—– Torna a Surriento.

 

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Metropolitan Museum of Art. Fifth Avenue. New York street series. By Paul Goldfinger. 

 

SOUNDTRACK:   Harry Nilsson.

 

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“Slow dancin’…in the tents” By Paul Goldfinger. Soundtrack by Wynton Marsalis.

 

 

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From the NYC Street Series: “Broadway Baby.”  Summer in the City. Paul Goldfinger photo.  Blogfinger.net

 

SOUNDTRACK:  From an original Broadway guy:  Stephen Sondheim’s Follies.  Jayne Houdyshell in the New Follies cast album from 2011.

 

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Cassis, France. 1996.   By Paul Goldfinger. © Silver gelatin print. Click once to view full screen; then back arrow.

 

PINK MARTINI:  “Dondé Estas,  Yolanda?”    (trans:  Where are you, Yolanda?)

 

 

 

 

 

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By Paul Goldfinger, Editor  @Blogfinger    I like this post, so here it is again.

Some of you read this post, but there is one addition* regarding Madeleine Peyroux the jazz singer working a corner in Paris.    The year is 1991, and we were visiting Paris  with our son Michael for his 21st birthday.   We had been there before and we liked the Left Bank the best, especially the area near the oldest church in town  (St. Germaine des Pres)  located on the Boulevard St. Germaine.

 

Michael Goldfinger. We stayed in a walk-up small hotel. Paul Goldfinger photo.

 

You can walk that neighborhood and find bookstalls along the River Seine, Musee D’Orsay—home of the Impressionists, funky neighborhoods near the Sorbonne, antique shops, bistros where you can’t get a bad meal, small hotels with floor to ceiling windows and no elevators, and wonderful food markets.

 

Boats moored along the Seine. Paul Goldfinger photo ©

Boats moored along the Seine. Paul Goldfinger photo ©

 

Behind the old church where the Blvd. St. Germaine meets Rue de Rennes, is a tiny park where you can relax, called the Rue de l’Abbaye—a respite from the bustle all around it.  But also at that intersection is the famous Café Les Deux Magots where Hemingway, Picasso and other artists and intellectuals used to hang out. It’s so much fun to sip an espresso there and people-watch.

 

Park adjacent to the church: St. Germaine des Pres. Paul Goldfinger photo ©.

 

One evening Michael, Eileen,  and I took a walk.  At the corner, in front of the church and across from the café, we heard a street band playing. They were called “The Lost Wandering Blues and Jazz Band,”  composed mostly of American musicians.  But we were most intriqued by their vocalist, a seventeen year old young woman from New York and California who sounded like Billie Holiday.

She had been living in Paris since she moved there at age 16 with her mom.  Madeleine Peyroux is now a jazz star who performs around the world, but we think of her standing on the sidewalk with a floppy hat on, charming the crowd.

Below is the Café Deux Magots which dates back to 1875—just a few years younger than Ocean Grove.

And below that is Madeleine Peyroux singing in French. The song is “J’ai Deux Amours”  (I have two loves).  It is from her album “Careless Love.”    That’s a good song for an album with that name.

 

Cafe Deux Magots. Paris. 1991. By Paul Goldfinger

 

Presenting Madeleine Peyroux: *  I just found a photo which I took that evening in 1991 across the street from Deux Maggots and on the corner of the church. For years I wondered why I didn’t photograph her.

 

 

The teen age Madeleine Peyroux singing with an American band in Paris. Paul Goldfinger photo ©. Copywrite. 1991.

 

 

 

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