Avenue des Gobelins (Eugène Atget)
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'''''Avenue des Gobelins'''''[http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Atget_-_Avenue_des_Gobelins.jpg?uselang=fr] (1925, also known as ''La Vitrine du tailleur'') is a photo by French photographer [[Eugène Atget]]. | '''''Avenue des Gobelins'''''[http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Atget_-_Avenue_des_Gobelins.jpg?uselang=fr] (1925, also known as ''La Vitrine du tailleur'') is a photo by French photographer [[Eugène Atget]]. | ||
The photo shows three [[mannequins]] in a window-shop; one of which is seen to be alive upon close inspection. Inside the shop between the two mannequins there is a man that wears the same clothes as the mannequins, has the same rigid posture. This can be interpreted as an [[allegory]] of modern civilization, representing the uniformity imposed on individuals by clothing. | The photo shows three [[mannequins]] in a window-shop; one of which is seen to be alive upon close inspection. Inside the shop between the two mannequins there is a man that wears the same clothes as the mannequins, has the same rigid posture. This can be interpreted as an [[allegory]] of modern civilization, representing the uniformity imposed on individuals by clothing. | ||
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==See also== | ==See also== | ||
*[[Avenue des Gobelins]] | *[[Avenue des Gobelins]] | ||
*[[Conceptual photography]] | *[[Conceptual photography]] | ||
{{GFDL}} | {{GFDL}} |
Revision as of 22:32, 26 December 2011
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Avenue des Gobelins[1] (1925, also known as La Vitrine du tailleur) is a photo by French photographer Eugène Atget. The photo shows three mannequins in a window-shop; one of which is seen to be alive upon close inspection. Inside the shop between the two mannequins there is a man that wears the same clothes as the mannequins, has the same rigid posture. This can be interpreted as an allegory of modern civilization, representing the uniformity imposed on individuals by clothing.
See also
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