Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts

Tuesday, 19 September 2017

Show of an icon

There’s been quite a number of interesting exhibitions ‘on offer’ recently and we’ve managed to visit several, such as that of the renowned French photographer Robert Doisneau at the Turku Art Museum.



Doisneau (1912-1994) was one of the pioneers of photojournalism whose passion was to capture meaningful moments of the everyday life of ordinary people, both young and old, most often on the streets of Paris. According to his own words, however, he didn’t photograph life as it was but as he would have liked it to be.

His most iconic photo The Kiss (by the townhall) or Le baiser de l’hôtel de ville published in the Life magazine in 1950 has become the symbol of young love in Paris. Even I happen to have a copy of it inside my Paris travel guide. (I haven’t been this old forever, you know.) Some 40 years later a couple sued Doisneau claiming they were the lovers in the photo that had been taken without their consent and demanded the rights to it. It was then revealed The Kiss was to some extent staged, which was a bit of a sensation but actually a storm in a teacup if you ask me.

A modest gentlemanly professional like Doisneau would never have taken such an intimate photo without permission, especially in those days, especially in a country where he might have lost its rights because of that. In fact, he had seen the couple kissing and had asked if they would repeat the kiss for him, which they readily did. He had also given the lady in the photo an original signed print which she sold half a century later at an auction for €155,000!

Sculptor Jean Tinguely.

Writer Simone de Beauvoir.

Sculptor Alberto Giacometti.
Sculptor Niki de Saint Phalle.

Some of Doisneau’s insightful portraits were also shown at the exhibition. But most of all I enjoyed the 77-minute biographical documentary Robert Doisneau: Through the Lens (Robert Doisneau, le révolté du merveilleux) directed by his granddaughter Clémentine Deroudille that was running nonstop on two tv screens throughout the show. I found myself mesmerised by it. Personages like Doisneau who led a balanced life despite all the talent, success and fame preferring to keep themselves in the background are a rare resource these days. Do not miss the film if you ever have a chance to watch it!

Filmmaker Jacques Tati.


Painter Fernand Léger.
The Turku exhibition closed some time ago but there is one ongoing at the Lucca Center of Contemporary Art in Lucca, Tuscany, Italy (until Nov 12) and another one at the Tourist Office of Urrugne in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques department in France (until Oct 13). For more information and photos of Doisneau’s works you can visit the website of Atelier Robert Doisneau founded by his two daughters.




Friday, 11 September 2015

Breathtaking portraits

Should you be visiting  Stockholm this weekend take care not to miss one of the greatest exhibitions you could see anywhere at the moment. Nick Brandt’s photos of the endangered animals of East Africa are on show at the Fotografiska, The Swedish Museum of Photography, for a few more days.


Brandt is an English film maker and photographer who worked in the 1990s in the USA directing music videos. While filming Michael Jackson’s ‘Earth Song’ in Tanzania, he fell in love with the wildlife and nature of East Africa. Ever since he has kept returning to this region with his camera recording the beauty and majesty of the animals there before man has driven them to extinction.


Brandt’s photos take your breath away. They are shot in black-and-white film at close range in the natural habitat of the animals without any telephoto or zoom lenses. The result is simply magnificent: monochrome portraits of calm and dignified beasts that make you feel as if they were posing to the photographer.



For more than a decade now Brandt has been working entirely on his East African project publishing a trilogy of books on this mission. In addition, he has founded, together with conservationist Richard Bonham, Big Life Foundation for the conservation of East African wildlife and the ecosystem. The foundation also operates to suppress poaching having more than 300 rangers patrolling from 31 stations.


In May, we saw 65 photos selected from those published in Brandt’s two first books in Salo, a small town 45 min from here. The Stockholm show includes for the first time photos from all the parts of the trilogy entitled ‘On This Earth’, ‘A Shadow Falls’, ‘Across The Ravaged Land’. The next opportunity to see these fabulous photos will be in Ulm, Germany, from June to October 2016. Another show is being planned for Moscow although that one is not scheduled yet. I do hope you will be lucky enough to visit a Brandt exhibition somewhere one day.