Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/02/11
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]The International Center of Photography in New York is hosting an exhibit of Henri Carter-Bresson's scrapbook through April 29th. Why HCB's scrapbook? It seems that after WW2, HCB arrived in the US with a single scrapbook which summed up what he considered his best work, sort of a photographic autobiography. The images in the scrapbook became the focus of a MoMA show which burnished his reputation as the premier Leica photographer of his generation. The scrapbook, itself, was never seen in public. Now the International Center of Photography has restored it. HCB has been described as "an artistic journalist who never allows the immediacy of the event to get the better of his eye." But the scrapbook reveals that he wasn't much of a technician. His photos would probably be thoroughly criticized on the LUG. The scrapbook shows that many of his tiny pictures were blurry and hard to make out. The HCB legend owed much to the capabilities of lab technicians who managed to tease out memorable images from his photos. HCB claimed never to crop his photographs, contending that he framed the image as he wanted before ever pressing the shutter button. Apparently the scrapbook proves otherwise. Some of his most famous pictures are shown in uncropped form and are quite different from those released to the public. Does this ring a bell with recent posts on the LUG? Still, critics regard peering into HCB's scrapbook as similar to visiting a famous painter in his studio and seeing the preliminary sketches as well as the finished works. If you are in New York during the coming couple of months, don't miss the exhibit. Larry Z