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Romance and realism in Brassai's Paris pictures

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  • Romance and realism in Brassai's Paris pictures

    Romance and realism in Brassai's Paris pictures
    By Robert Reed / Special to The Daily Yomiuri

    The Daily Yomiuri (Tokyo)
    September 1, 2005 Thursday

    The Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography in Ebisu is celebrating
    its 10th year with a schedule of special exhibitions that reflect
    its character as an institution dedicated to building and educating
    an audience for the art of photography. After a series of three
    exhibitions covering the history of photography in Japan up through
    World War II, the museum now presents a show of the works of Brassai,
    one of Europe's best-known photographers of the 20th century.

    This show is exemplary of the kind of high-quality presentations of
    foreign artists the museum has sought to bring its audience over the
    last 10 years and, in fact, is one that was assembled by the Pompidou
    Centre, Paris, in 2000, to celebrate the centenary of the artist's
    birth and that has since toured to Britain and Italy.

    Brassai is known today primarily as a photographer of the streets
    and cafes of Paris at the time between the two world wars when the
    city was the artistic capital of Europe. Like so many of the artists,
    writers and thinkers gathered in Paris at that time, Brassai was not
    a native Parisian but an expatriate drawn to the City of Light by
    its irresistible intellectual and artistic gravity.

    Born Gyula Halasz, the pseudonym Brassai that he chose after beginning
    his artistic activities in Paris in the early 1930s means "of Brasso"
    (Brasov), his native town in what was Hungarian Transylvania (now
    part of Romania). His mother was Armenian and his father a Hungarian
    professor of French literature with a degree from the Sorbonne. After
    studying art in Budapest and Berlin, Brassai finally realized his
    dream of living in Paris at the age of 25, in 1924.

    During his first years in Paris, Brassai supported himself by writing
    as a correspondent for Hungarian and German publications while devoting
    himself to the study of French. In Berlin, he had counted artists
    such as Kandinsky, Kokoschka and Moholy-Nagy among his friends,
    and after moving to Paris he was again quick to make friends in art
    circles. One of the first of these was the photographer Eugene Atget,
    whose works Brassai came to admire deeply.

    It was in 1929 that a friend lent Brassai a camera so that he could
    take his own pictures to send back with his articles to Hungary and
    Germany rather than having to rely on other photographer's pictures.
    As soon as he began to take and develop pictures, Brassai decided that
    photography was a medium through which he could express his view of
    the world.

    In Brassai's first serious portraits of Paris, beginning in 1930,
    what we see is not the City of Light but the empty streets of the
    Parisian night that he loved to wander. The collection of photographs
    published late in 1932 under the title Paris du nuit (and in the
    English edition as Paris After Dark in 1934) quickly caught the
    attention of the Paris art world.

    In the selection of works from this period on view in the Ebisu show,
    we see the deserted night streets, peopled only occasionally by young
    hoodlums from the slums and prostitutes on the Place d'Italie. In
    these early years Brassai also photographed the nightlife of Paris,
    in the cafes and bars, the dance halls and the brothels.

    If the images appear stark it is because Brassai sought unadorned
    reality above all else. If they seem unfinished it is because, like
    that first camera that started him on his quest, Brassai always tried
    to keep the spirit of the amateur, using no special equipment and
    developing no new techniques.

    In keeping with this stance, he also fervently denied the label of
    artist throughout his career. The ground he broke was not in the
    realm of technique or style but in the new subject matter he found
    and the intimate knowledge of the fellow artists he photographed in
    their studios. Brassai considered Goethe to be his true mentor and
    he adopted the philosopher's aphorism as his own: "Little by little,
    objects have raised me to their own level."

    There is a striking photograph in this show titled A Subway Pillar
    that exemplifies a series of photographs in which Brassai sought to
    express the nobility of ordinary objects. He called this series Objets
    a Grandes Echelles (Large-scale Objects) and it was these images that
    caught the eye of Picasso and made him ask Brassai to photograph the
    large stock of sculptures he had not yet shown the public.

    Later, Brassai would be invited to the studios of many artists and
    writers of the day, including Matisse, Giacometti, Pierre Bonnard,
    George Braque, Georges Rouault, Bernard Buffet, Aristide Maillol,
    Samuel Beckett, Thomas Mann and Olivier Messiaen. Particularly
    memorable was a 1939 pictorial feature in Life magazine titled
    "Picasso in his Studio."

    But this is not the side of Brassai's career that the Ebisu show
    focuses on. The Pompidou Centre collection from which his show is
    compiled includes the vast archive of the Brassai estate and the
    artist's personal collection that his widow, Gilberte, donated to the
    museum. From this, the show seeks to present the full spectrum of
    Brassai's own creative genius rather than his perhaps more visible
    role as chronicler of the Paris art world. Thus, the show includes
    Brassai drawings and sculpture as well as photographs.

    As an art student, Brassai had naturally studied drawing, and he would
    return to drawing as a medium of artistic expression in his 40s, partly
    out of necessity. In the fateful month of June 1940, when the German
    Army occupied Paris, Brassai was in Cannes, having fled before the
    invasion with many of his artist friends. Although he had an invitation
    to move to the United States, he boarded the last refugee train back
    to Paris because he had forgotten to bring along his negatives.

    Back in Paris, Brassai was told by the German occupation authority
    to apply for a license to practice his profession as a photographer.
    When he refused to do so, he was forbidden to work as a photographer
    for the remainder of the war. This is when he returned to drawing and
    made it a medium that he would continue to work in for the rest of
    his life. This is also the period when Picasso asked him to photograph
    his sculptures.

    After the war, Brassai began making sculptures of his own, from the
    stones he found during his frequent alpine treks in the French Alps.
    Many of these charming works are stylized nudes that parallel his work
    in drawing and photography--also on display in this show. Other works
    seem to reflect the primitivism that had captured the imagination of
    Picasso and many other artists of the day. And one humorous sculpture
    is a Picassoesque bust in miniature of Picasso himself.

    Another part of this show that is sure to impress visitors is the
    selection of prints from Brassai's Graffiti series, a collection
    of photos of Paris wall graffiti that the artist sought out and
    photographed over a period of more than 30 years. These images created
    a sensation in New York when they were first shown together at the
    Museum of Modern Art in a show organized by American photographer
    Edward Steichen.

    The reception was equally fervent in Europe when Brassai's Graffiti
    books were published in Germany and France. By this time, artists
    like Picasso, Braque, Miro and Dubuffet were already avid collectors
    of these prints, some of which came in pairs with a 10-year interval
    between them to show how the graffiti had aged over the years. In
    this show, these haunting images are grouped under Brassai's original
    themes of Love, Death, Magic and the Primitive.

    Brassai--From the Pompidou Centre Collection

    Until Sept. 25, open daily 10 a.m.-6 p.m. (until 8 p.m. on Thursdays
    and Fridays). Closed Mondays except Sept. 19, when the museum closes
    the following day instead.

    Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, a seven-minute walk from
    JR Ebisu Station.

    Admission: 1,000 yen for adults, 900 yen for university students and
    800 yen for high school and middle school students and seniors 65
    and older.

    Information: visit www.syabi.com or call (03) 3280-0099.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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