Jacques Henri Lartigue
Life in Color
29/04/2016
02/07/2016
FIFTY ONE TOO
Opening: Thursday, April 28th from 6 to 9 pm
FIFTY ONE TOO is pleased to present the second solo show of the French painter-photographer Jacques Henri Lartigue (Fr, 1894-1986) “Life in Color” : intimate colour snapshots of Lartigue’s elite world of the 20th century. One third of his voluminous photographic oeuvre is consisting of early colour photographs, giving a new perspective on the vitality, the poetry and the enchantment of his renders.
Jacques Henri Lartigue
Jacques Henri Lartigue took his first photographs at the age of six, using his father’s camera, and started keeping what would become a lifelong diary. In 1904 he began making photographs and drawings of family games and childhood experiences, also capturing the beginnings of aviation and cars and the smart women of the Bois de Boulogne as well as society and sporting events. An unfailingly curious amateur, he tried out all the available techniques, tirelessly recording the fleeting moments and meticulously arranging his several thousand images in large albums.
However, it would seem that photography was not his true vocation. In 1915 he attended the Académie Jullian: painting was to remain his professional activity and from 1922 onwards he exhibited in the salons of Paris and southern France.
His acquaintances in the world of the arts included Sacha Guitry and Yvonne Printemps, Kees van Dongen, Pablo Picasso and Jean Cocteau, while his passion for movies saw him work as a still photographer with Jacques Feyder, Abel Gance, Robert Bresson, François Truffaut and Federico Fellini.
biography
Born in Courbevoie, France in 1894
Died in Nice, France in 1986
Although Lartigue occasionally sold his pictures to the press and exhibited at the Galerie d’Orsay alongside Brassaï, Man Ray and Doisneau, his reputation as a photographer was not truly established until he was 69, with a retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the publication of a portfolio in Life. He now added his father’s first name to his own surname, becoming Jacques Henri Lartigue. Worldwide fame came three years later with his first book, The Family Album, followed in 1970, by Diary of a Century, conceived by Richard Avedon. In 1975 he had his first French retrospective at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris. For the rest of his life, Lartigue was busy answering commissions from fashion and decoration magazines.
He also produced the official photograph of the new French president, Valéry Giscard d’Estaing.
All images are copyright Ministère de la Culture-France / AAJHL