Brassaï: Difference between revisions
m Robot - Moving category 20th-century French photographers to French photographers per CFD at Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2010 March 8. |
No edit summary |
||
Line 35: | Line 35: | ||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Brassai}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Brassai}} |
||
[[Category:French people of Hungarian descent]] |
[[Category:French people of Hungarian descent]] |
||
[[Category:French |
[[Category:French Armenians]] |
||
[[Category:Hungarian photographers]] |
[[Category:Hungarian photographers]] |
||
[[Category:Hungarians of Armenian descent]] |
[[Category:Hungarians of Armenian descent]] |
Revision as of 13:28, 22 March 2010
Brassaï (pseudonym of Gyula Halász) (9 September 1899 – 8 July 1984) was a Hungarian photographer, sculptor, and filmmaker who rose to fame in France.
1899-1930
Gyula Halász was born in Brassó (Braşov), in Hungary, now Romania, to a Hungarian father and an Armenian mother.[1] He is sometimes incorrectly described as Jewish.[2] When he was three, his family moved to live in Paris, France for a year, while his father, a Professor of Literature, taught at the Sorbonne. As a young man, Gyula Halász studied painting and sculpture at the Academy of Fine Arts in Budapest, before joining a cavalry regiment of the Austro-Hungarian army, where he served until the end of the First World War. In 1920 Halász went to Berlin, where he worked as a journalist and studied at the Berlin-Charlottenburg Academy of Fine Arts.
In 1924 he moved to Paris where he would live the rest of his life. In order to learn the French language, he began teaching himself by reading the works of Marcel Proust. Living amongst the huge gathering of artists in the Montparnasse Quarter, he took a job as a journalist. He soon became friends with Henry Miller, Léon-Paul Fargue, and the poet Jacques Prévert.
1930-1955
Gyula Halász's job and his love of the city, whose streets he often wandered late at night, led to photography while he was tutored by the fellow Hungarian master Andre Kertesz. He later wrote that photography allowed him to seize the Paris night and the beauty of the streets and gardens, in rain and mist. Using the name of his birthplace, Gyula Halász went by the pseudonym "Brassaï," which means "from Brasso." As Brassaï, he captured the essence of the city in his photographs, publishing his first book of photographs in 1933 titled "Paris de nuit" ("Paris by Night"). His efforts met with great success, resulting in his being called "the eye of Paris" in an essay by his friend Henry Miller. In addition to photos of the seedier side of Paris, he also provided scenes from the life of the city's high society, its intellectuals, its ballet, and the grand operas. He photographed many of his great artist friends, including Salvador Dalí, Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Alberto Giacometti, plus many of the prominent writers of his time such as Jean Genet, Henri Michaux and others.
Brassaï was a founding member of the Rapho agency, created in Paris by Charles Rado in 1933. His photographs brought him international fame leading to a one-man show in the United States at the George Eastman House in Rochester, New York, the Art Institute in Chicago, Illinois, and at New York City's Museum of Modern Art.
1955-1984
In 1956, his film, Tant qu'il y aura des bêtes, won the "Most Original Film" award at the Cannes Film Festival and in 1974 he was made Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters and given the Legion of Honor in 1976. Two years later, in 1978, he won the first "Grand Prix National de la Photographie" in Paris.
As well as a photographer, Brassaï was the author of seventeen books and numerous articles, including the 1948 novel Histoire de Marie, which was published with an introduction by Henry Miller. His Letters to My Parents and Conversations with Picasso, have been translated into English and published by the University of Chicago Press.
After 1961, when he stopped taking photographs, Brassaï concentrated his considerable energy on sculpting in stone and bronze. Several tapestries were made from his designs based on his photographs of graffiti.
Brassaï died on 7 July 1984 in Beaulieu-sur-Mer, Alpes-Maritimes, in the south of France and was interred in the Cimetière du Montparnasse in Paris.[3] The copyright representative for the Estate of Brassaï is French photography agency Réunion des Musées Nationaux (RMN),[4] which also mangages more than 1,400 high resolution scans of Brassaï's work.
In 2000, an exhibition of some 450 works by Brassaï was organized with the help of his widow, Gilberte at the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris.
Notes
- ^ About.com "Brassaï's father was Hungarian, a professor of French Literature at the University of Brassó, but his mother was of Armenian origin."
- ^ The following source describes Brassaï as "Hungarian-Jewish" (Newstatesman.com and Yiddishbookcenter.org) but the ethnic ancestry described in this biography (Halász Gyula: A századik év küszöbén. Bucharest, 1967) and the religious background described in his memoirs (Brassai: Letters to my Parents) contradict this.
- ^ Sayag and Lionel-Marie, eds., Brassai: The Monograph. Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 2000, p. 305.
- ^ RMN Copyright Conditions (PDF)
References
- Tucker, Anne Wilkes, with Richard Howard and Avis Berman. Brassai: The Eye of Paris. Houston, Tex.: Houston Museum of Fine Arts, 1997. ISBN 0810963809
- Brassai Biography