Joseph Breitenbach, Max Ernst, Paris 1939
| source | MoMA |

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Joseph Breitenbach, Max Ernst, Paris 1939
| source | MoMA |
Joseph Breitenbach, Bertolt Brecht, Paris 1939
| source | lien |
Bill Brandt, E.M. Forster in His Room at King's College, Cambridge 1947
| source | MoMA |
Bill Brandt, Norman Douglas, London 1946
| source | MoMA |
Berenice Abbott, Christopher Street shop, New York, ca 1948 (photo 1)
André Kertész, Christopher Street, New York, 1950 (photo 2)
Independent of one another, Berenice Abbott and André Kertész photographed the same shop on the small workshop on the Christopher Street in New York, apparently attracted by the window display which featured a clock with a very large dial and a wooden vehicle for transportation. Whilst Kertész heightens the scurrility of the scene with the shadow of an unseen passer-by falling into the picture from the left, Abbott's conception on the other hand was rather more factually documentary, the gaze trained on the pictures of her model EugÚne Atget in the streets of Paris.
| source 1 | Lempertz |
| source 2 | Lempertz |
Man Ray, La Ville, Paris, 1931
| source | Kunstsammlungen Chemnitz |
Else Thalemann, Eiffelturm, Paris, ca 1930
| source | Kunstsammlungen Chemnitz |
André Kertész, A Hungarian Memory (1914-1924) - Part II
| source | Swann Galleries |
André Kertész, A Hungarian Memory (1914-1924) - Part I
| source | Swann Galleries |
Anne Brigman, Jack London and his wife, Charmain, examining a map, 1906
| source | Swann Galleries |
Alexander Hesler, Portrait d'Abraham Lincoln, Springfield, Illinois, 3 juin 1860
Il sâagit dâune des trois photographies prises par Hesler Ă Springfield alors que Lincoln Ă©tait en campagne prĂ©sidentielle. Lincoln aurait commentĂ©: "That looks better and expresses me better than any I have ever seen; if it pleases the people, I am satisfied."
| source | Swann Galleries |
Don't put my name on it. These are simply documents I make.
Man Ray
Erich Salomon (1886-1944)
Erich Salomon (nĂ© en 1886), dont le parcours et le destin tragique sont intimement liĂ©s Ă lâhistoire politique et mĂ©diatique de lâentre-deux-guerres, est certainement lâun des premiers photographes Ă percer le monde impĂ©nĂ©trable du pouvoir et Ă dĂ©voiler au grand public lâintimitĂ© des cĂ©lĂ©britĂ©s de son Ă©poque. Son travail a ainsi marquĂ© la naissance dâune nouvelle Ăšre du photojournalisme, prototype de ce qui deviendra, bien des annĂ©es plus tard, la "mĂ©thode paparazzi". Toutefois, si les procĂ©dĂ©s utilisĂ©s par Erich Salomon prĂ©sentent des similitudes avec la "chasse au people" moderne (intrusion sans autorisation dans des lieux protĂ©gĂ©s, quĂȘte de la "proie", usage dâun matĂ©riel ultrasophistiquĂ©), le savoir-faire, lâĂ©thique et surtout les ambitions dâErich Salomon, sans parler du contexte dans lequel il a Ă©voluĂ©, le distinguent clairement des photographes-chasseurs actuels.
| suite | Petit journal #47 : Erich Salomon - le roi des indiscrets, 1928-1938. Jeu de Paume |
Arnold Newman, Man Ray, Los Angeles, 1948
| source | Heritage |
Virginia Leirens, Franz Hellens, ca 1955
| source | Cornette de Saint-Cyr |
Je veux le dire en commençant: j'ai vĂ©cu plusieurs vies; autant qu'il fut en moi de personnes. Et la derniĂšre, pas plus que les autres, je ne l'achĂšverai. Je suis mort plusieurs fois, et ressuscitĂ©. Mourrai-je tout Ă fait aprĂšs ma derniĂšre aventure, cet hiver oĂč je suis, saison de sable, de neige et de bois mort? -- Franz Hellens, MĂ©moires d'Elseneur (Albin Michel, 1954)
Francesco Ferruccio Leiss, La Palette du photographe, ca 1950
| source | RMN |
Willy Kessels, Autoportrait, 1932
| source | RMN |