Home Europa Raymond Depardon a Parigi

Raymond Depardon a Parigi

PARIGI. Il colore appare  già dalle prime immagini di Raymond Depardon e lo ha accompagnato, da quando aveva 16 anni, in tutti i momenti salienti: dagli anni della scoperta della fotografia ai primi viaggi in Africa fino al progetto “Un moment si doux” che dà anche il titolo alla mostra parigina. Fino al 10 febbraio, infatti, al Grand Palais saranno in mostra 160 fotografie a colori (molte delle quali inedite) per una passeggiata attraverso la vita e l’opera dell’artista dalla fine degli anni ’50 ad oggi.

 

Raymond Depardon Glasgow, Écosse, 1980 34 x 51 cm © Raymond Depardon / Magnum Photos. Crédits photographiques : Légende. Lieu. Date © Raymond Depardon / Magnum Photos
Raymond Depardon
Glasgow, Écosse, 1980
34 x 51 cm
© Raymond Depardon / Magnum Photos. Crédits photographiques : Légende. Lieu. Date © Raymond Depardon / Magnum Photos

 

I suoi primi scatti riprendono la madre, gli animali della fattoria dei suoi genitori, il trattore rosso, la tovaglia in tela cerata in cucina. Non ha ancora 20 anni quando si trasferisce a Parigi e presto, già dagli anni Settanta-Ottanta, Raymond inizia a lavorare per le grandi agenzie come la Dalmas, la Gamma e Magnum realizzando numerosi reportage a Biafra, Ciad, Venezuela… Giornalista e regista, ha anche vinto il Premio Pulitzer nel ’77.

 

Raymond Depardon
Harar, Éthiopie. 2013
170 x 203 cm
© Raymond Depardon / Magnum Photos. Crédits photographiques : Légende. Lieu. Date © Raymond Depardon / Magnum Photos

 

Raymond Depardon “A Sweet Moment” at Grand Palais from 2 december to 10 february

Colour appeared in Raymond Depardon’s first photographs from the very start. He was only sixteen. Since then, colour has been part of the highlights of his career: the years discovering photography, the first trips to Africa, the great reportages, then recently this “sweet time” which gives the exhibition its title. The exhibition presents about 160 colour photographs, most unpublished. Taking colour as a guideline, it explores the artist’s work and life from the late 1950s to the present day.

First clicks “I did not realise I was a colour photographer. And yet it was there. From the very first pictures“. (Raymond Depardon). For Raymond Depardon, colour is linked to childhood. His first pictures were of his mother, the animals on his parents’ farm, the red tractor, the kitchen tablecloth. He was not yet twenty when he “went up” to Paris and moved into the back room of a photographer’s shop on Saint Louis Island, where he took a snap of himself on his scooter. He became a photo reporter, he photographed Edith Piaf, he was sent to Africa, he saw the world. Since then, colour has been part of his way of looking at things.

 

Raymond Depardon
Harar, Éthiopie. 2013
170 x 170 cm
© Raymond Depardon / Magnum Photos. Crédits photographiques : Légende. Lieu. Date © Raymond Depardon / Magnum Photos

 

Reporter In the 1970s and 1980s, Raymond Depardon worked for big agencies: Dalmas, Gamma, Magnum. He took colour photos, thought in colour, questioning human beings and the right distance from reality. In Chile in 1971, in Beirut in 1978, in Glasgow in 1980 he focused not on events but what was happening around them. These are fundamental reportages.

Chile In 1971, two years before Salvador Allende died, he took photos of Mapuche Indians fighting to live on the lands of their ancestors. He watched men labouring in the fields and thought about his father. He was 28, wondering about his relationship to the world and to the subject. Looking for a new path.

Beirut In 1978, in Beirut on an assignment for the German magazine Stern, he turned away from reportage. He did not photograph the civil war but its consequences. Raymond Depardon stayed there for a month, photographing passionately in colour. His reportage went round the world.

 

Raymond Depardon
Sur la route avant La Paz, Bolivie. 2005
45 x 34 cm
© Raymond Depardon / Magnum Photos. Crédits photographiques : Légende. Lieu. Date © Raymond Depardon / Magnum Photos

 

Glasgow In 1980 the Sunday Times asked him to go to Glasgow. To a photographer of the south and the desert, Glasgow seemed to be at the antipodes of his photography. And yet he discovered the northern light, and remembered it later when he photographed the north of France. In Glasgow he functioned like an anthropologist: how could he avoid the trap of exoticism? What distance should he take? In large cities, Raymond Depardon feels like an inner exile, as a young man he found it hard to find his foothold in Paris. The photos taken in Glasgow were never published but they heralded the work on the big cities that he showed at the Cartier Foundation for Contemporary Art in 2004.

Such a sweet time In the 2000s colour reappeared and took over. It was no longer related to reportage, the press and news stories, but to a quest for personal truth, the search for happiness, a place to live in, a beginning. Depardon rediscovered the light and colour of Ethiopia, South America and the palm groves of Chad. This year, he specially returned in five country (Ethiopia, Chad, Bolivia, Hawaii and United States) in order to realise new photographies for the exhibition. “Such a sweet time” reveals a quieter, more inward, more intellectual approach. Raymond Depardon is now, to quote Clément Rosset, looking for the “sweetness of reality”

 

Raymond Depardon
Plage de Wai Ki Ki, Honolulu, 2013
170 x 170 cm
© Raymond Depardon / Magnum Photos. Crédits photographiques : Légende. Lieu. Date © Raymond Depardon / Magnum Photos

 

 

Exit mobile version