HENRI CARTIER-BRESSON (French, 1908-2004) Maharajah of Baria Arrives To Marry, Jaipur, 1948.

HENRI CARTIER-BRESSON (French, 1908-2004) Maharajah of Baria Arrives To Marry, Jaipur, 1948.

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HENRI CARTIER-BRESSON (French, 1908-2004)Ā Maharajah of Baria Arrives To Marry, Jaipur, 1948.Ā Sheet Fed Gravure, 1952, France. Photogravure Dimensions: 9.20 x 13.45 INCHES,Ā Heat Wax Mounted on Conservation Board, 14.00 x 18.00 INCHES.Ā Ā 

HENRI CARTIER-BRESSONĀ first traveled to India in December 1947, taking a 6,888 nautical mile journey by sea from England. Upon arriving, he encountered a newly independent nation whose people were experiencing mounting tensions due to the religiously based partition of India and Pakistan. Amidst this conflict, Cartier-Bresson captured one of his best known images,Ā Maharajah of Baria Arrives To Marry, Jaipur, 1948.

Cartier-Bressonā€™s status as a premier photojournalist, increasing demand for his pictures from leading publications including LIFE, Harperā€™s Bazaar, Now, and The New York Times Magazine. Over the course of the next 40 years, Cartier-Bresson continued to return to India, traveling there six times through 1987. - PHILLIPS

LITERATURE:

Thames & Hudson, Henri Cartier-Bresson: In India
Thames & Hudson, Henri Cartier-Bresson: The Image and The World

HENRI CARTIER-BRESSON (French, 1908-2004)Ā Upon picking up a Leica camera in the early 1930s, Henri Cartier-Bresson fell in love with the spontaneity of photography and went on to pioneer photojournalism. MoMA credits his ā€œuncanny ability to capture life on the runā€ with helping to define the creative potential of modern photography and lauds him as ā€œthe keenest observer of the global theater of human affairs.ā€ Taking pride in capturing ā€œthe decisive moment,ā€œ Cartier-Bresson intimately captured portraits and scenes, both mundane and historic, around the world. In 1947, he formed Magnum Photos, a photography cooperative, with Robert Capa and others. Over the ensuing three decades, assignments took him from Ghandiā€™s funeral in India, to the chaotic streets of Shanghai during Chinaā€™s Communist revolution, to Queen Charlotteā€™s elegant ball in London. ā€œTo take a photograph is to align the head, the eye and the heart. It's a way of life,ā€ he said. - ARTSYĀ 

Authenticated by Borgia, INC.

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