Palazzo Grassi
Henri Cartier-Bresson. Le Grand Jeu
Palazzo Grassi presents Henri Cartier-Bresson. Le Grand Jeu, until
March 2021, co-organised with the Bibliotheque
nationale de France and in partnership with the Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson. Based
on a project conceived and coordinated by Matthieu Humery, the exhibition looks at how the work of Henri
Cartier-Bresson (1908 – 2004) is viewed by five different curators, focusing
particularly on the Master Collection.
Henri
Cartier-Bresson - Barrio Chino – Barcelone
– Espagne – 1933
Wim Wenders – film still
The Master
Collection
The
Master Collection created in 1973 by
Cartier-Bresson at the request of
his art collector friends Dominique and
John de Menil, for which the
photographer carefully selected the 385
best images from his contact sheets. Six
sets of this extraordinary collection of the photographer’s work where printed.
This Master Collection has been examined by five guest curators: collector Francois Pinault, photographer Annie Leibovitz, writer Javier Cercas, film director Wim Wenders, and heritage conservator Sylvie Aubenas. Hence, there is no
monograph, theme, geographical area or chronology but rather a comparison of five
points of view on the work of the Eye of
the Century.
Dimanche sur les bords de Seine – France – 1938
“Le Grand Jeu - The Great Game: the title, reminiscent of chance,
a theme dear to the surrealists, primarily refers to the artist’s selection.
With various connotations, can also suggest recreation or leisure. Lastly, the
concept can also refer to the set of rules to which one must submit, namely “to
play the game”. But jeu – game
- is also, a homonym of je - I
- thus, like an exquisite cadaver, the ”Great I” exalts itself, firstly via the
homage paid here to the work of one man, but also through the visual expression
of the – Me - of each curator, which necessarily emerges from the game that
they have developed.”
Mathieu Humery
chief curator
Mathieu Humery
chief curator
The Rules of the Game
The
rules of the game are simple: the five joint curators were required to
individually select about 50 of the artist’s images from the Master Collection. None of the curators
knew the others’ selections. All aspects of the exhibition – the design of the
layout, framing, colour of the picture rails – have all been left to the
absolute discretion of the curators. Each space is therefore an exhibition in
its own right that is independent of the others. The five curators freely give
us their story, their emotions and the place that these images have occupied in their work and in their
life.
Las Vegas - Etats-Unis – 1947
Francois Pinault - Collector
The Ordinary and Extraordinary Passage of Time
The Ordinary and Extraordinary Passage of Time
“I believe that a collection,
or in any case the one that I have built and continue to enrich, aims to hold
on to the ineluctable passage of time. The works and the dialogue created
between them are the expression of life itself, its dynamism and passion.
Cartier-Bresson is an artist who shows us the furtive, comical, and familiar
aspects of life.”
Hyde Park – Londres – Angleterre
-1937
“Truth, simplicity, humility: that is what characterizes the work of
Cartier-Bresson in my eyes. That is what I wanted to try to reflect in the
choices I have made. Undoubtedly, there is a link with my love of minimalist
art. I love the fact that a lot is said with a minimum of means.”
Francois Pinault
Francois Pinault
Colette – Paris - France –
1952
“Spectators can walk through this ensemble as they please and create
their own visit. I believe this is what attracted me to this group of works. I
can choose from amongst the numerous photographs, creating an intimate
relationship with them in a unique and moving experience.”
Francois Pinault
Francois Pinault
Boston – Etats-Unis – 1947
20170918 VNF 01D AL_VF_SELF_PORTRAIT_iPHONE_045_D
- Annie Leibovitz - © Annie Leibovitz – courtesy Palazzo Grassi
Annie Leibovitz – photographer
Seeing Cartier-Bresson’s Work
“Seeing Cartier-Bresson’s work made me want to become a photographer…
The idea that a photographer could travel with a camera to different places,
see how other people lived, make looking a mission—that that could be your life
was an amazing, thrilling idea.”
“The first thing I
did was pick out pictures that had a strong influence on my work and were
indelibly etched in my mind. The ones that mean the most to me are probably the
portrait of Matisse and the photograph of the picnic at the edge of the water. They
are in The World of Cartier-Bresson,
but I picked other pictures that are not. Over the years, other pictures have
seamlessly merged with the ones I was drawn to first.”
Annie Leibovitz
Henri Matisse a son domicile – Vence – France – 1944
“I studied the pictures as a photographer, admiring Cartier-Bresson’s
talent and his eye. An intuitive master of composition, he was out there with a
small 35mm camera, working in a completely original way—framing, choosing what
to include and what not to include in a picture, establishing depth and
relationships.”
Annie Leibovitz
Irene et Frederic Joliot-Curie – France - 1944
Jean-Paul Sartre - pont des Arts – Paris – France - 1946
Joe, trompettiste de jazz, et sa femme May - New York, Etats-Unis, 1935
Joe, trompettiste de jazz, et sa femme May - New York, Etats-Unis, 1935
Ezra Pound – 1971
Henri Cartier-Bresson Bougival - France, 1956 - epreuve
gélatino-argentique de 1973 © Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos - courtesy Palazzo Grassi
“Why these photographs? And
what did the numbering system for the pictures imply? The answer that came back
about the numbers was that most of the pictures were organized by country or
geographical region. In any case, I used the official sequencing to pin the
photographs, which I had printed the size of index cards, in rows on a wall of
my studio.”
Annie Leibovitz
Annie Leibovitz
Bougival - France - 1956
© Palazzo Grassi - photo by Matteo
De Fina – courtesy Palazzo Grassi
Javier Cercas - writer
An Imminent Revelation
"My
choice was not at all based on esthetic, historic, or biographical criteria but
on the sheer impact the images had on me, their simple visual force or capacity
to intrigue me, in short criteria that could be considered instinctive rather
than intellectual. Nevertheless, it’s true that when I was preparing the
anthology, I realized that Cartier-Bresson’s work had a close, almost
unhoped-for relationship with my own research, with my interests and concerns
as a writer."
Prostitues
- calle Cuauhtemoctzin – Mexico – 1934
Brasserie Lipp - Saint-Germain-des-Pres – Paris – France - 1969
Alicante - Espagne - 1933
Matthieu Humery and Javier
Cercas
“Past is not dead. It’s not even past.”
William Faulkner
William Faulkner – Oxford – Etats-Unis – 1947
“I immediately noticed an unintentional logic in my selection and I
wanted to reflect that in the way the photographs were displayed in the
exhibition. It is organized in the same way that I have always structured my
books or music that I like—from Baroque music to rock and roll—or in other
words according to repetitions and variations on the same theme,
characteristics, styles, or tones that appear here and there, disappear and
reappear.”
Javier Cercas
Lourdes – France – 1958
“The third point is the violence, above all the violence of war or
revolution. Finally, the last point is Spanish reality, which for many had
become fundamental for Cartier- Bresson since his experience of the civil war.”
Javier Cercas
Javier Cercas
Volcan – Popocatepetl – Mexique – 1963
Wim Wenders – film director
An Eye for an Eye
but in a new sense, not with that old meaning of “revenge”
“I had made this selection strictly from my own gut reaction to the
Master Collection that I had spread out on the floor of my studio. These thirty
pictures were those that had spoken to me the most. But didn’t they represent
my own personal feelings, like a mirror, rather than opening to others an
“understanding” of Henri Cartier-Bresson?”
Henri Cartier-Bresson – Prisoner of war – Germany - 1942
Wim Wenders – film still
“Now I can see much better what it is that touched me! Only now do I
see that all these people show themselves to me (and to you, too) today as if
we were in direct touch, as if “our relation” hadn’t gone through the lens of
Henri Cartier-Bresson’s Leica.”
Wim Wenders
Bruxelles – Belgique - 1932
“…but the mystery is that whatever connection there was between them
and him doesn’t interfere with our way, today, of seeing them. There is a
directness and immediacy that we might recognize from our contemporary
photographic “smartphone” practice and from all these pictures we take without
thinking of them as photographs, including selfies. It’s hard to put my finger
on it, but there is something in these portraits by Henri Cartier-Bresson that
entirely defies the period they were taken in.”
Wim Wenders
Cantine pour les ouvriers travaillant sur la construction de l’hotel
Metropol – Moscou – Russie – URSS - 1954
Sylvie Aubenas chez Mariage Freres
- Paris 4e. Octobre – 2014 – courtesy Palazzo Grassi
Sylvie Aubenas - heritage
conservator
Life Lines - Convergence Lines
‘Several things stand out in
his career and distinguish him above and beyond his immense talent: his
pioneering and intuitive understanding (right from the start) of the importance
of exhibitions and books for a twentieth-century photographer, of organizing
and reorganizing his work at crucial moments in his life and in particular
eliminating images, and, finally, the categorical and concise manner with which
he expressed his conception of photography.
Underneath this strict,
almost rigorous sense of organization, this grand bourgeois, this well-read man, lover of painting, this man who in his texts and interviews spoke more willingly about Proust or Cezanne than photography, this elusive character who knowingly cultivated some seemingly obvious paradoxes, constructed a photographic ensemble dazzling with lightness, empathy, humanism, and humor and who, with his Leica glued to his eye, lived through more than forty years of twentieth–century and photographic history. “
almost rigorous sense of organization, this grand bourgeois, this well-read man, lover of painting, this man who in his texts and interviews spoke more willingly about Proust or Cezanne than photography, this elusive character who knowingly cultivated some seemingly obvious paradoxes, constructed a photographic ensemble dazzling with lightness, empathy, humanism, and humor and who, with his Leica glued to his eye, lived through more than forty years of twentieth–century and photographic history. “
Coco Chanel – Paris – France - 1964
Vigneron
– Cramont – France - 1960
Alberto Giacometti - rue d’Alesia – Paris – France - 1961
Livourne – Italie - 1933
Sylvie Aubenas chez Mariage Freres - Paris 4e. Octobre – 2014
“Photo shooting. Or taking a photo if you prefer. That’s my passion. [.
. .] I wasn’t interested in the result. [. . .] shooting and nothing more.”
Henri Cartier-Bresson
Washington DC - Etats-Unis - 1957
“The more famous he became
the more he expressed his distaste for fame, his total rejection of power,
honors, awards, indoctrination. He proclaimed himself to be an anarchist, a
libertarian, an atheist, putting his liberty and independence above all else.
He expressed his taste for certain writers—Proust, Stendhal, Rimbaud,
Baudelaire, Joyce, Beckett, Gracq. . . —and for painters such as Paolo Uccello,
Pierre Bonnard, Matisse, Cezanne, van Eyck… He had far greater esteem for
painting than photography.”
Slyvie Aubenas
Slyvie Aubenas
Dessau – Allemagne - mai-juin -1945
“Photography is putting the head, the eye, and the heart on the same
line of vision. It’s a way of living.”
Henri Cartier-Bresson
Henri Cartier-Bresson
Forteresse Pierre-et-Paul sur la rivière Neva
Leningrad – Russie – URSS
– 1973
The fake Leica made by Henri Cartier-Bresson’s
artist friend Saul Steinberg, shown in Wim Wenders’s rooms, continues the irony
and reinforces the cinematic illusion of the installation. This artefact upsets
what we see and believe, similarly to an actor dressing up in a costume to play
at being someone else. Cartier-Bresson would not be able to shoot anything with
this Leica, a testimony to the long-standing friendship between the two
creators.
Saul Steinberg – Untitled – fake Leica – wood – metal - 1974