Icons of French Cinema at galerie JOSEPH minimes in the Marais

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Icons of French Cinema at galerie JOSEPH minimes in the Marais
We’re all familiar with promotional photos and posters for movies – the ones showing romantic lovers gazing into each other’s eyes, or creepy people gazing menacingly into the camera, or small figures on a promontory above an ominous sea. Most of us assume they are frames from the film, but perhaps surprisingly, usually they are not. Rather, they are posed photographs taken by photographers tasked with capturing the spirit of the film to entice viewers. The names of the photographers who took those photos are almost never known, and most of us never think to ask who took them. Thus, they remain anonymous and unrecognized, even though their work is sometimes indispensable to a film’s success. The new exhibition at galerie | JOSEPH |minimes in the Marais, Icônes de la Nouvelle Vague aux Années 70 (Icons of the New Wave in the 70s), is the first exhibition to explore the intersection between film and photography – what the exhibition catalog calls “the vital rapport… between the cinematography itself and the still images that document the film’s production and serve its promotion.” It is an effort to show that the photographs intended to promote a film have a quality, identity, and value in their own right, to give credit where credit is due, and to bring to light the names of the photographers whose work any movie aficionado would recognize, but usually without knowing the photographer’s name. The more than 100 photographs in the exhibition focus on the work of two of the greatest French “stills” or “on-set” photographers – Raymond Cauchetier and Georges Pierre – who both helped create and document the Nouvelle Vague – the New Wave – of French cinema in the mid-1950s. A little context. By the mid-1950s, cinema had been around for nearly 50 years, the first movie theatre having been opened in 1905 in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, and the medium was dominated by Hollywood studios. It was probably inevitable that the system would be challenged – the status quo always eventually is – and it was, most notably in France by Jean-Luc Godard and François Truffaut, who rejected the artifice and narrative conventions of mainstream cinema. Godard and Truffaut first discussed their ideas in Les Cahiers du Cinéma, the oldest French-language film magazine in publication. Eventually, however, they started making movies that put their words into action. Truffaut’s 1959 movie, Les Quatre Cents Coups (The 400 Blows), and Godard’s À Bout de Souffle (Breathless) portrayed a gritty realism, in contrast to the fantasy and escapism then dominating movies. Other such directors included Claude Chabrol, Jacques Demy, and Alain Resnais. These New Wave directors smashed the existing paradigm of movie making by filming in real locations instead of on movie sets, and by using natural light and more improvisational cinematography. They even broke the narrative rules with deliberate discontinuity; as Godard said, “a story should have a beginning, a middle and an end, but not necessarily in that order.” An important part of the context in which New Wave cinema arose was the fact that World War II had ended just a few years before, and existentialism had flowered in France under Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone De Beauvoir, and Albert Camus. At the same time, the invention of smaller format cameras and faster lenses and film made it easier to free cinema from the studio. It was within this context that Raymond Cauchetier and Georges Pierre, the Icônes whose work is explored in the exhibition, working with Truffaut, Godard, and other directors, produced some of the photographs which are themselves considered icons of French cinema, and which in the process also made icons of the actors they photographed, such as Jean-Paul Belmondo, Jean Seberg, Jeanne Moreau, Catherine Deneuve, Yves Montand, Anna Karina, and Romy Schneider. Raymond Cauchetier was born in Paris in 1920. He was a member of the resistance during World War II and began photographing while in the army. Awarded the Legion of Honor by de Gaulle for his service in Indochina, he left the army in 1954 and published a well-received book of war photographs. In Paris he tried to get a job as a reporter, but with no success, so he returned to Indochina, where he was offered his first job as a cinema photographer for a film by French director Marcel Camus, with the responsibility of taking a photo at the end of a shot. But Cauchetier decided to expand the role of the cinema photographer to one of reporter. Accordingly, he took photos of everything – the equipment, the shooting conditions, the directors, and the actors – thus recording in real time the revolution in cinematography that he simultaneously helped advance and record and which became known as the New Wave. Indeed, he took some of the most famous photographs of cinema of the 1960s: Jean-Paul Belmondo and Jean Seberg on the Champs-Élysées in Godard’s À Bout de Souffle (1961); Jeanne Moreau, Henri Serre, and Oscar Werner running on a bridge in Truffaut’s Jules et Jim (1961); and of Anouk Aimée in Jacques Demy’s Lola (1960). Age 98, Cauchetier lives in Paris, a living…
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Lead photo credit : François Truffaut 1961 – Jules et Jim by François Truffaut © Raymond Cauchetier

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Diane Stamm occasionally writes from Paris.

Comments

  • Alvin Berkon
    2019-02-16 21:35:41
    Alvin Berkon
    A beautiful article. Loved it!

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