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Henri Cartier-Bresson: Capturing Fragments of Reality: Grand Master of Photojournalism
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14194 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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7 / 1988 |
1,453 Words |
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Nancy Barrett Nancy Barrett is curator of photography at the New Orleans
Museum of Art. |
Lincoln Kirstein said of Henri Cartier-Bresson that he was responsible for more memorable images than any other photographer of his time. He may well have been right. Who can help smiling at the leaping Parisian with his bowler-hatted straddle mirrored in a puddle (Aperture 39), or ever forget the passion unleashed upon a Gestapo informer photographed in Dessau in 1945? Cartier-Bresson produced four decades of such unforgettable images, pictures widely published in the leading illustrated magazines of the time, such as Vu, Life, Harper's Bazaar, and many others. His very personal style of photoreportage, part travelogue, part social commentary, also illustrated his more than ten books on all parts of the globe: Les danses à Bali (1960), From One China to Another (1956), The Europeans (1955), The Face of Asia (1972), About Russia (1973), and others.
Almost as well known as a creator of memorable phrases, Cartier-Bresson has described the "decisive moment" aesthetic that defines his photographs. It was made possible by the 35-mm camera (Cartier-Bresson rarely used anything else), its speed and portability enabling him to catch what he called, in the title of his first book, "Images à la sauvette." Translated in the English edition as The Decisive Moment, the words refer to the French slang term roughly translated as "grab shots," and describes images that stress the almost predatory intrusion of photography into the flow of time. "Photography is for me," he wrote in the introduction to Decisive Moment, "the development of a plastic medium, based on the pleasure of observing, and the ability to capture a decisive moment in a constant struggle with time."
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