Its title was “The Europeans.” A few respectful reviews aside, and despite a parallel American edition, the book didn’t have much immediate impact — far less than the work Cartier-Bresson had ...
“The intensive use of the photographs by the mass media lays ever fresh responsibilities upon the photographer.... We must take greater care than ever not to allow ourselves to be separated from the ...
Sensational works of French photographer and artist Henri Cartier-Bresson (1908–2004) are showcased in this comprehensive collection. Cartier-Bresson, widely regarded as a pioneer of street ...
Henri Cartier-Bresson, a founding father of photojournalism and one of the great photographers of all time, put down his Leica professionally in 1975 after a 45-year career behind the camera. "I never ...
“In the mid 1960s, Cartier-Bresson met with MOMA’s then curator of photography, John Szarkowski, and they decided to mount a major exhibition of 150 of his works titled ‘Recent Photographs,’ which ...
Henri Cartier-Bresson's photographs are of some the most epic events of the past century, beautifully printed in black-and-white. The vast majority of those gelatin silver prints were made by one man ...
Henri Cartier-Bresson, who almost single-handedly brought photojournalism to the pitch of pictorial art, died Tuesday in l'Ile-sur- Sorgue, France. He was 95. Cartier-Bresson became one of the most ...
It has been a decade since Henri Cartier-Bresson died at the age of 95. While the French icon and founding member of photography powerhouse Magnum Photos has had his share of exhibitions and shows, a ...
French artist Henri Cartier-Bresson thought that sensitivity was the most necessary requirement for taking good photographs, or in fact, making good art. He believed that pictures were “composed in ...