"
Certain men of the past century have been renoticed who stood away from this confusion. Eugène Atget worked right through a period of utter decadence in photography. He was simply isolated, and his story is a little difficult to understand. Apparently he was oblivious to every-thing but the necessity of photographing Paris and its environs: but just what vision he carried in him of the monument he was leaving behind is not clear. It is possible to read into his photographs so many things he may never have formulated to himself. In some of his work he even places himself in a position to be pounced upon by the most orthodox of surrealists. His general note is lyrical understanding of the street, trained observation of it, special feeling for patina, eye for revealing detail, over all of which is thrown a poetry which is not “the poetry of the street” or “the poetry of Paris” but the projection of Atget’s person."
Walker Evans on Atget, in 'The Reappearance of Photography' in Hound and Horn no. 5 (October-December 1931)
A few things stated in this thread need to be corrected. Berenice Abbott did not "discover" Atget, as seems to be implied in some comments. He was a well known figure, and revered by the surrealists throughout the 20s. First time Abbott saw a print of Atget was in fact in Man Ray's studio in 1925, and many of his photographs were included in the Premier Salon Indépendant de la Photography in Paris in 1928, one year after his death.
Even though he spent time in France in the 1920s, Evans discovered Atget later, in New York, thanks to the photographs Abbott brought back with her and the book she published. No other photographer, safe August Sander, had a greater influence on Evans' development than Atget - you can literally see him "quoting" Atget in many of his photographs of the 30s. Without Atget, there's no
American Photographs.
Szarkowski indeed understood Atget's major importance in the history of modern photography - as can clearly be read in the
press release for the Atget retrospective he curated at MoMA in 1969.