Brassai 1968-Book-Palm Beach Bookery
Lawrence (intro). DURRELL (Author)

Brassai 1968

Regular price $31.98

Brassai by Museum of Modern Art, 1968  By: Lawrence (Intro). DURRELL (Author)

Good Condition (Shiny dust jacket has some tiny discolored area at the corner. Glossy pages are bright and without underlining, notations, and highlighting.)

BIOGRAPHY

Whether a couple embracing in a seedy nightclub, a prostitute flaunting herself under a streetlight, or a huddle of petty criminals under an otherwise abandoned bridge, Brassaï found poetry in the derelict. “The thing that is magnificent about photography is that it can produce images that incite emotion based on the subject matter alone,” he once said. Best known for photographing candid night-time scenes in the Montparnasse district of Paris—an area populated with artists, streetwalkers, petty criminals, and prostitutes (subjects that initially scandalized the public)—Brassaï was dubbed the “eye of Paris” by his friend, the American writer Henry Miller. Originally born Gyula Halász, he later acquired the pseudonym Brassaï after his Hungarian hometown Brassó and made an international name for himself with books such as Paris de nuit (Paris After Dark) (1933) and Voluptés de Paris (Pleasures of Paris) (1935), in which he captured both the seedier sides of the French capital and its high society. “There are many similarities between what we call the 'underworld' and the 'fashionable world,” he said. Over the course of his career he photographed many of his artist friends including Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dali, and Alberto Giacometti, as well as prominent writers such as Jean Genet.

French, born Hungary, 1899–1984, Brasov, Romania, based in Paris, France


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