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Print deadline • Druckschluss PiB Guide Nº57 NOV/DEC 2024
⤷ Sat, Oct 19

Robert Doisneau: La dernière valse du 14 juillet, 1949 © Atelier Robert Doisneau, 2016
Robert Doisneau: La dernière valse du 14 juillet, 1949 © Atelier Robert Doisneau, 2016

Robert Doisneau: La dernière valse du 14 juillet, 1949 © Atelier Robert Doisneau, 2016

Robert Doisneau: Le Baiser de l’Hôtel de Ville, Paris, 1950 © Atelier Robert Doisneau, 2016

Robert Doisneau: Le Baiser de l’Hôtel de Ville, Paris, 1950 © Atelier Robert Doisneau, 2016

Robert Doisneau: Mademoiselle Anita, 1951 © Atelier Robert Doisneau, 2016

Robert Doisneau: Mademoiselle Anita, 1951 © Atelier Robert Doisneau, 2016

Robert Doisneau: La dernière valse du 14 juillet, 1949 © Atelier Robert Doisneau, 2016Robert Doisneau: Le Baiser de l’Hôtel de Ville, Paris, 1950 © Atelier Robert Doisneau, 2016Robert Doisneau: Mademoiselle Anita, 1951 © Atelier Robert Doisneau, 2016

Exhibition

»Robert Doisneau – Photographs«
From Craft to Art

Exhibition: December 9, 2016 – March 5, 2017
Curated by Agnès Sire and Atelier Robert Doisneau
Framework programme: see Martin-Gropius-Bau website
Opening hours: Wed-Mon 10-19h, Tuesday closed
Open on holidays, closed on 24 and 31 December 2016
The box office closes at 18:30h.
Admission: 7 / 5 € (Online Ticket)

Description

People like my photos because they see in them what they would see if they stopped rushing about and took the time to enjoy the city…”
Robert Doisneau

Very few photographers have become famous through a single picture. “Le Baiser de l’Hôtel de Ville” (The Kiss by the Hôtel de Ville) is such a picture, which Robert Doisneau (1912–1994) took in March 1950 in front of a Parisian street café in the Rue de Rivoli. The image of the couple kissing was a work commissioned by LIFE magazine. Although it was staged, it contains an entire story: It became the symbol of Paris as the “city of love”. It is one of the iconic photographs of the 20th century.

However, Doisneau’s oeuvre is much deeper and more complex. It is comprised of approximately 350,000 photographs, including professionally crafted shots and others which have the force and charisma of an artistic solitaire. He worked as a photojournalist for the major magazines such as Vogue, Paris Match, Le Point and LIFE. His most famous photographs were shot while wandering about the French metropolis. The exhibition provides an inside view of Doisneau’s work with around 100 selected photographs – most of them taken during the 1940s and 50s. It shows his fascination for the normal, for the petit bourgeois and for the melancholic and fragile.

During the first half of the 20th century, Paris was one of the leading artistic metropolises of the world. The French capital attracts artists from all nations as it is multi-facetted and an ideal environment to capture in snapshots. Artists such as Henri Cartier-Bresson, Brassaï, André Kertész, Martin Munkácsi, Germaine Krull, Robert Doisneau, use the new technical features of a camera with short exposure time and cultivate a photography of the moment. They focus on people and on a parallel trend, illustrating the increasing invasion of public life into the private sphere and making the private, intimate and personal visually public. Achieving this moment requires new aesthetic value measures. The relegation of the remaining is no longer the focal point of attention but rather the beauty of spontaneity becomes more and more noticeable.

Doisneau’s clients were photo agencies, fashion magazines and revues. They looked for photojournalists whose photographs can convey a momentary event comprehensively and with their own impressions. Doisneau delivered.

He prowled around the centre and outskirts of Paris with his Rolleiflex in his spare time. He was concerned with securing evidence. He did this less systematically than his great role model Eugène Atget (1857–1927), who catalogued street by street with his unwieldy large-format camera. Doisneau, however, was concerned with the atmosphere itself. He photographed building facades, interior rooms, quays, children playing, passers-by, wedding couples and moments that are often condensed into a sentimental story. He befriended intellectuals, journalists and poets like Robert Giraud (1921–1997), Jacques Prévert (1900–1977) and Blaise Cendrars (1887–1961). They took him with them to bars and music halls. In 1949, he published the book “The Suburbs of Paris“ with Blaise Cendrars.

Doisneau was born in the Banlieues in the small village of Gentilly southwest of Paris in 1912. He finished his studies at the École Estienne in Paris in 1928 with a diploma in lithography and engraving. He first worked as an assistant to the “Encyclopédie photographique de l’art” photographer and publisher André Vigneau (1882–1968) in 1931 and then as a factory photographer for the car manufacturer Renault between 1934 and 1939. He stopped working for Renault to become a freelance photojournalist at the renowned Rapho Agency. During the Second World War, he documented daily life in occupied and later liberated Paris. He wanted his work to be understood as an encouragement to life.

To this day, Robert Doisneau stands for what is called “humanist photography”: a photography, which turns to people in their everyday life. The surprising moments of everyday life in the big city of Paris made him one of the most important chroniclers of the 20th century.

Find further details & the framework programme on the website of Martin-Gropius-Bau!

Event Details

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