Famous photographer

Berenice Abbott

An American photographer, Berenice Abbott was a central figure in and important bridge between the photographic circles and cultural hubs of Paris and New York. She was born in Springfield, Ohio, and in 1918 moved to New York, where she studied sculpture independently, meeting and making vital connections with Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray, leaders of the American avant-garde. In 1921, Abbott moved to Paris and continued her study of sculpture there and, later, in Berlin, before returning to Paris and becoming an assistant at the Man Ray Studio, where she would master photography. Her first solo show was at the gallery Le Sacre du Printemps in Paris in 1926 and featured portraits of the Parisian avant-garde, a practice she continued throughout her years in Paris, as in James Joyce. Her work was included in many influential exhibitions of the era, including the Salon de l’escalier, 1928; Fotografie der Gegenwart, 1929; Film und Foto, 1929; and Photography: 1839–1937, 1938; as well as in a solo-exhibition at the Julien Levy Gallery in 1932. In 1970, The Museum of Modern Art hosted a career retrospective.


Photos Berenice Abbott Took 

Night View, New York, 1932


Gelatin silver print



El at Columbus Avenue and Broadway c. 1929


Rockefeller Center, New York City c. 1932


Photos Berenice Abbott (1918) took VS the Photos I Took (2023) 

Huxley-Parlour Gallery ca. 2010

She used the natural light (the sun) to get all details of this photo. 


In my recreation of Berenice Abbott photo I couldn't use a light source like a lamp because the light source she used is outside and since its outside Im going to be using the bright sun as my light source. 



The Main Street Project ca. 1966

She used the natural light (the sun) to get all details of this photo. 

In my recreation of Berenice Abbott photo I couldn't use a light source like a lamp because the light source she used is outside and since its outside Im going to be using the bright sun as my light source. 


Muriel Rukeyser's Eye ca. 1940 

She used light on the left side of this picture, to get her eye "brighter". 

In my recreation of Berenice Abbott photo I took my light source and shined it on the left side of her face and made sure her eye was bright in detail. 


Peggy Guggenheim ca. 1926


She used light directly on the object(s) she used for this photo. 


In my recreation of Berenice Abbott photo I took my light source and shined it onto my object(s) infront of them to get all of their details.