Gabriel Lekegian

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Gabriel Lekegian
Ottoman Egypt

Gabriel Lekegian (1853 – c. 1920), also known as G. Lékégian, was an

Ottoman Egypt, he documented the country at the turn of the 19th century. Among other collections, his photographs are held in the New York Public Library and the Victoria and Albert Museum
, London.

Biography

Princess Nazli
of Egypt (1906)

Around 1880, Lekegian was based in Constantinople, now Istanbul, and at the time the capital of the Ottoman Empire, where he was a student of the Italian expatriate painter Salvatore Valeri. Working with watercolours, Lekegian produced a series of figurative and genre studies in the detailed style of his teacher, displaying Orientalist tendencies borrowed from Valeri and French academic painter Jean-Léon Gerome. Lekegian's paintings were exhibited in Constantinople in 1881 and 1885 in London.[1] Very few of these, such as his painting of a palace guard or a woman with a water jug in Constantinople, are known to have survived.[2]

Upon his move to Cairo, he apprenticed in one of the Armenian or Greek photographic studios. After establishing his studio opposite the Shepheard's Hotel in Cairo's European district, Lekegian positioned himself as an 'artistic' photographer, distinguishing himself and his work as aesthetically superior to his mainly Armenian, French or Greek competitors, such as Jean Pascal Sébah or the Zangaki brothers.[3]

Courtyard in Cairo
Ludwig Deutsch - The Scribe, 1904

A successful businessman, Lekegian produced numerous

angle of view in Deutsch's paintings El Azhar - The Arab University in Cairo and The Scribe are doubtlessly comparable to Lekegian's photographs of the same places.[5]

Lekegian became a favoured photographer for the

Princess Nazli, had their portraits taken by him. After he became the official photographer of the Anglo-Egyptian army in 1883/84, Lekegian's business prospered even more.[6] He received commissions to illustrate books and to provide images of government building operations in the region. These images have been seen as Lekegian’s least known, but remarkable works as early forms of documentary photography.[1]

Apart from famous views for the growing number of tourists, such as the Pyramids, temples in Luxor and scenes of the Nile, Lekegian also created numerous images of historical buildings in Egypt, as well as scenes drawn from the daily life of soldiers, bedouins and other Egyptians, including photographs of people from Sudan. According to the Armenian Photography Foundation,[1]

His photographs of peasants, craftsmen and the poor are not mere theatrical fantasies about a country frozen in past. Instead they show the complex, multifaceted and rapidly changing environment, which Egypt was at the time. He is a rare practitioner of the time who believed that his medium was on par with any other art form and constantly experimented with and developed its aesthetic qualities.

— Armenian Photography Foundation, Gabriel Lekegian

In his book New Egypt (1905), to which Lekegian had contributed photographs of buildings, native people and an equestrian statue of Mohamed Ali, American travel writer Amedée Baillot de Guerville (1869–1913) wrote: "There are very few good photographers in Egypt, and I should advise those amateurs who do not develop their own work to be very careful. I have had many plates and films absolutely ruined by ignoramuses calling themselves “prize photographers.” To those in Cairo I can thoroughly recommend either M. Lekégian or M. Dittrich, photographer to the Court."[7] As Lekegian produced dry-plate images from 10'' x 8'' large formats up to ultra large 20'' x 16'' formats, New Egypt further wrote that he "has, besides some remarkable portraits, a unique collection of views both in large prints and in postcards."[6]

Along with images by other well-known photographers, such as Felice Beato, Jean Pascal Sebah or the Zangaki Brothers, his images were often published in albums showing touristic sites in Egypt. In the early 1920s, Lekegian's studio produced mainly portraits and postcard compilations from his old negatives, and it is believed that he closed down his business and retired soon after.[1]

Recognition

Young woman with elaborate jewellery, including a cross and traditional dress, before 1920

A collection of his photographs of ancient Egyptian sites near Cairo and Luxor, as well as images of local people and events was published around 1880 under the title Photographs of Egypt showing Cairo, Luxor, and the Nile Banks).[8] Further, a library box with 58 unbound albumen prints measuring 22 x 28 cm on light blue mounts, most of them titled in French, numbered and signed "Photogr. Artistique G. Lekegian", is held in the New York Public Library.[9] Similar albumen prints, mainly by Lekegian, were included in two albums with photographs of ancient and late 19th-century Egypt in 1910 by a German group of Orient travellers. These were edited in the 2011 book Ägypten: Eine Reise durch drei Zeiten; Bildband der frühen Orientfotografie. (Egypt: A journey through three times; Picture book of early Orient photography)[10]

At the 1889 International Exhibition in Paris, Lekegian won a medal for 'Professional Artistic Photography',[3] and at the World’s Columbian exposition in Chicago in 1893, he was awarded the grand prize.[11]

In 2010, the Municipal Medieval Museum of

Félix Bonfils, Andreas Reiser and Lekegian.[12]

Lekegian's photographs are part of the permanent collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum,[13] and the Wellcome Collection,[14] London, the Swedish Hallwyl Museum, Leiden University Library in the Netherlands, Rice University's TIMEA - Travelers in the Middle East Archive [15] and of the Digital Collections of the New York Public Library.[16]

Gallery

  • Camel corps of the Anglo-Egyptian army
    Camel corps of the Anglo-Egyptian army
  • Village by the Nile near Gizeh
    Village by the Nile near Gizeh
  • Group of belly dancers
    Group of belly dancers
  • Bedouin encampment
    Bedouin encampment
  • Water seller
    Water seller
  • Sudanese man of the Shaigiya tribe
    Sudanese man of the Shaigiya tribe
  • Beggar
    Beggar
  • Woman from Upper Egypt
    Woman from Upper Egypt

See also

Other 19th-century photographers in Ottoman Egypt:

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Armenian Photography Foundation - Lekegian, Gabriel". lusadaran.org. Retrieved 2022-02-16.
  2. ^ "Gabriel Lekegian". www.artnet.com. Retrieved 2022-02-16.
  3. ^ a b Jacobson 2007, p. 250
  4. ^ Behdad, A., Camera Orientalis: Reflections on Photography of the Middle East, University of Chicago Press, 2016, p. 25.
  5. ^ Perez 1988, p. 191
  6. ^ a b Hannavy, 2008, p. 840
  7. ^ Baillot de Guerville, Amédée (1906). "New Egypt [Electronic Edition]". scholarship.rice.edu. Retrieved 2022-02-25.
  8. .
  9. .
  10. ^ Petit, 2011
  11. ^ Julie K. Brown. Contesting Images: Photography and the World’s Columbian Exposition, University of Arizona Press, 1994.
  12. OCLC 710817016
    .
  13. ^ "Lekegian". collections.vam.ac.uk. Retrieved 2019-12-09.
  14. ^ "Lekegian | Catalogue search". Wellcome Collection. Retrieved 2022-02-16.
  15. ^ "Lekegian". scholarship.rice.edu. Retrieved 2022-02-25.
  16. ^ "Search results - Lekegian". digitalcollections.nypl.org. Retrieved 2022-02-15.

Bibliography

External links