| | | | Jean-Philippe Charbonnier Bettina, Place Vendome, Paris 1953 | | All Paris in a frame | | | | 26 October to 21 December, 2024 | | Opening: Saturday, 26 October, 7pm Oepning hours until 30 November: Wednesday - Friday 4 - 7 pm, Saturday 11 am - 3 pm The gallery is closed during Paris Photo from 6 - 10 November. Visits until 21 December by appointment: +49 (0)177 3202913 | | | | | | | | | | Elliott Erwitt Paris, 1989 | | | | in focus gallery is pleased to present the exhibition "All Paris in a frame" in good time before the friends and collectors of photography worldwide make their way to Paris for the world's largest fair for photographic art - Paris Photo - with photographs by internationally renowned photographers. "Paris is considered the cradle of photography, the glorious starting point of the new medium. It was here that the photograph in the form of the Daguerreotype was made public in mid-August 1839 and presented to an astonished world public without a patent. A date that marked nothing less than the beginning of the photographic age. It is no coincidence that the photographer and historian Jean Claude Gautrand speaks of a 'love story between Paris and photography', which probably refers to the large number of chemists, opticians and artists who immediately took up the new medium as researchers or practitioners, as well as to the fact that Paris itself quickly and privilegedly became the subject of images." (Hans-Michael Koetzle, from: "Eyes on Paris", 2011) | | | | | | Sabine Weiss Ave-de-Versailles, 1953 | | | | In this exhibition, the gallery is presenting a unique collection of photographs by world-famous artists such as Ilse Bing, Edouard Boubat, Jean-Philippe Charbonnier, Elliott Erwitt, René Groebli, Frank Horvat, Walde Huth, Thomas Kellner, Willy Maywald, Marc Riboud, Willy Ronis, Louis Stettner and Sabine Weiss. The photographs in this exhibition, most of which were taken between 1950 and 1980, offer a fascinating insight into the attitude to life in Paris at that time, while typical sights appear little or only as a peripheral phenomenon. | | | | | | Willy Ronis Avenue Simon Bolivar, Paris, 1950 | | | | What many of the exhibited photographs have in common is a certain tendency towards nostalgia and the depiction of an urban, upbeat atmosphere that is presented as typical of Paris. The canon of motifs includes lovers, clochards, fashion, dogs, bistros, nightlife, bridges over the Seine, children at play and the small, modest and sometimes overlooked things in everyday life: people passing by, shop window displays, staircases, parks, billboards or street lamps. These photographs show the lives of ordinary people as well as the charm of Paris as a city of love, fashion, nightlife and café culture. | | | | | | Willy Maywald Jacques Griffe, 1952 | | | | unsubscribe here Newsletter was sent to [email protected] © 21 Oct 2024 photography now UG (haftungsbeschränkt) Ziegelstr. 29 . D–10117 Berlin Editors: Claudia Stein & Michael Steinke [email protected] . T +49.30.24 34 27 80 | |
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