Showing posts with label French photographers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label French photographers. Show all posts

Sunday, September 10, 2023

Overlooked No More / Claude Cahun, Whose Photographs Explored Gender and Sexuality


“Que me veux-tu?” by Claude Cahun, 1928.

Credit...Claude Cahun, Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris


Overlooked No More: Claude Cahun, Whose Photographs Explored Gender and Sexuality


Society generally considered women to be women and men to be men in early-20th-century France. Cahun’s work protested gender and sexual norms, and has become increasingly relevant.

Overlooked is a series of obituaries about remarkable people whose deaths, beginning in 1851, went unreported in The Times. This month we’re adding the stories of important L.G.B.T.Q. figures.


By Joseph B. Treaster
June 19, 20l19

In early-20th-century France, when society generally considered women to be women and men to be men, Lucy Schwob decided she would rather be called Claude Cahun.

Claude Cahun / Finding a lost great

Claude Cahun


 

Claude Cahun: Finding a lost great

This article is more than 11 years old


Far too complicated and singular for her own good, she was also – as Breton said – 'one of the most curious spirits of our time'

Gavin James Bower

14 February 1012

A

writer born into literary royalty, with a pseudonym to hide the fact; a forebear of Cindy Sherman, with only one self-portrait published in her lifetime; a lesbian in love with her step-sister; a Jewish, Marxist Surrealist – Claude Cahun is probably the most complicated artist you and I have never heard of.

Saturday, June 10, 2023

Henri Cartier-Bresson / China 1948-1949, 1958

 

Celebrations for the ninth anniversary of the People’s Republic, Beijing, 1 October 1958


Henri Cartier-Bresson, China 1948-1949, 1958 | Book 

April 29, 2020
While Henri Cartier-Bresson is famous for having a strongly Euro-centric sensibility and choice of subject matter – one of his most famous collections is called The Europeans – he had a great affinity for, and experience of, East Asia.

Friday, June 9, 2023

Cartier-Bresson is Here


Henri Cartier-Bresson

 

Cartier-Bresson is Here 

Yongquan Jin;
 
Jinsheng Zhao
December 21, 2021

On June 16, 1958, French photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson arrived in Beijing. According to a press release from the Chinese Photographers Association (CPA), Cartier-Bresson came to China on a “photographic visit” for a book to be entitled “Ten Years of the People's Republic of China.”1 As “friends will be treated with good wine,”2 on June 26, the president and vice president of the CPA received Cartier-Bresson and hosted him at a banquet according to Chinese etiquette. During Cartier-Bresson's shooting in Beijing, the CPA also sent someone to accompany him.

Monday, July 5, 2021

Sophie Calle / Take Care of Yourself


Take Care of Yourself 


SOPHIE CALLE


Sophie Calle’s art mixes image and text to provoke the kind of intense emotional response usually inspired by epic literature or film. Her most extraordinary works address rather ordinary human tendencies, from the morbid curiosity informing L’Homme au Carnet (The Address Book, 1983) to the amorous betrayal of Douleur Exquise (Exquisite Pain,1984–2003), but Calle knows how to up the ante and amplify a generic foible into a tragic flaw. She’s a master manipulator who has taken the pushing of personal buttons to the level of fine art.

Alain Laboile / At the Edge of the World



Alain Laboille
AT THE EDGA OF THE WORLD



Monday, July 15, 2019

Alain Laboile / Summer of the fawn




Summer of the fawn
by Alain Laboile


“ live in rural France, near Bordeaux. Sculptor by trade and father of six, I have documented the life of my big family on a daily basis since 2006. My work depicts the sweet madness of childhood, the intrinsic relations of siblings and their close interaction with nature. These little snapshots of simple life are a day-to-day chronicle of living together. Our daily life is a sweet quietude, but also a bubbling, a permanent emulation in which each individual, rich in his own identity, helps to preserve the balance of the family nucleus. Homeschooled, our children live the most relaxed life ever, freed from educational dictates.”



“Time goes by so quickly. I would like my photos to allow my children to dive back into their childhood when they are adults and feel past emotions. These photographs can be a good help to build themselves as parents. We understand our children better when we remember the child whom we once were and how we lived.”

Monday, May 11, 2015

Sophie Calle / True Stories / Book Review



Book Review

Sophie Calle, True Stories

Book Review
TRUE STORIES
by Sophie Calle


Sophie Calle, Room with a View, from True Stories, 2010


Book Review: Sophie Calle, True Stories
True Stories
Sophie Calle
November 2010, Steidl & Partners,

Reading and making notes on Sophie Calle’s new publication, I am trying to be attentive, but am distracted with loneliness. Writing and making are difficult. I am living awkwardly with my parents and concerned about money. As Calle put it in a 2007 interview, emotional moments such as these are “banal”; everyone can identify with them, therefore they are hardly the stuff of art. Yet, on its most directly accessible level, Calle’s work has always been about the pain of the everyday. As in my opening gambit, she often operates within the territory of emotion shared, projected publicly between strangers and acquaintances.

Since her early experiments in following strangers around Paris, from 1979 onwards, and photographing friends and visitors sleeping in her bed, documented as The Sleepers (1981), Calle has developed a reputation as a serious conceptual artist, going on to represent France at the Venice Biennale (2007) with an installation processing a recent relationship breakdown curated by her contemporary Daniel Buren. Calle’s status as a respected artist is significant given her attitude to her first works. She claimed in a 2009 interview that The Sleepers became an unintentional work of conceptual art only “when the wife of a critic told him about it. He came along. He said, ‘Is this art?’ and I said, ‘It could be.’” Calle then took notes and photographed the situation, reframing it within critical discourse. Given this tale of stumbling into a prolific performance art practice because she needed “rules”, Calle’s current recognition as a photographer equally strikes a tension between the planned and the surprising.


In “I’m a Photographer!”, the introduction to True Stories (2010), Steidl’s publication celebrating Calle’s reception of the prestigious Hasselblad Award for photography, the artist notes that for her “it is the text that has counted most.” Composing phrases is Calle’s strength, so much so that she collects found photographs and commissions professional photographer Jean-Baptiste Mondino to take pictures for her, weaving stories around these borrowed scenes. Yve-Alain Bois (ArtForum, 2000) writes of Calle as being “not interested in photography per se, she's an apprentice sleuth.” Another diversion from the conventional documentary image is the performative aspect of her work, as Johnnie Gratton (Paragraph, 2006) observes: Calle’s project “places the energies of performance and process on at least an equal footing with whatever is destined to emerge as the end product.” Indeed, included in the book are stills from across the artist’s career, including her first book, Suite Vénitienne (1980-96) documenting her stealthy chase of a man to Venice.

The main body of the publication reframes Calle’s earlier book titled True Stories (2002) in this new context of an award-winning photographic retrospective. The True Stories project blurs the boundaries between truth and the made-up in a series of autobiographical text-image pairings, depicting such events as Calle’s disturbing turn as a life model whose drawn image is slashed with razor blades; her various weddings and almost-weddings; and her progress from privileged adolescence to heavily-documented adulthood with the accompanying threats of plastic surgery, negotiating sexuality and meeting fans. Perhaps, then, it is for her extensions of the photographic away from objectivity and into the subjective and fictive realms, as well as for exploring photography’s relationship to text, that Calle deserves this accolade.

Calle’s juxtapositions of short, self-conscious textual compositions and photographic portraiture, or painfully romantic, bodily imagery – especially as presented in the current edition of True Stories - have something in common with the project of British poet Gillian Allnutt. In her 2001 collection, Lintel, Allnutt produced a series of stream of consciousness, seemingly semi-autobiographical responses to a group of female portraits by the early expressionist German painter Paula Modersohn-Becker. Allnutt has been praised for the deliberately halting, hesitant quality of these poems that perhaps imitate the broken phrases and awkward silences of trauma victims sharing their stories for the first time. Even Allnutt’s visual arrangements of words on a page are telling, as they alter between sprawling and tightly column-like. Similarly, Calle’s dexterity with the book format allows her to present True Stories as a series of pauses for thought: on the left a perfectly centred paragraph with text describing a memory is surrounded by white space like an enlarged full stop; on the right a photograph displayed as if it had been the trigger for the strange or traumatic story to be uncovered.

Of course, while the majority of Allnutt’s images are found in public galleries, researched, and composed around, Calle’s are often staged, sometimes self-portraits, and always introducing the question of which came first: the picture or the “autobiography”? With such personal artwork, as with that of Louise Bourgeois, the problem of therapy is close at hand. For Calle, “if the work is therapeutic, that is a side effect for which I'm thankful." Whatever her motivations, True Stories is a valuable book that allows us to think about the contemporary meaning of photography outside of purely documentary, conventionally “skilled” or medium-specific practice. In addition, like an emotionally intelligent novelist, Calle extends the available language – both visual and textual - through which we might process difficult events and our own intimate identities.


Sophie Calle, The Other, from True Stories, 2010




Sophie Calle, The Wedding Dress, from True Stories, 2010


Becky Hunter is a writer based in London and Durham, UK. She is Assistant Editor for Whitehot Magazine.
rebeccalouisehunter(at)yahoo.co.uk
www.beckyhunter.co.uk






http://whitehotmagazine.com/articles/review-sophie-calle-true-stories/2216