The Edwynn
Houk Gallery is proud to present the first gallery show of vintage
prints by Jacques-Henri Lartigue from September 21 through November
4, 2000. More than sixty early vintage photographs by Lartigue
will be on view. The images are culled from the private collection
of Florette Lartigue, the photographer's widow who died in May.
Lartigue and his wife selected the prints from the photographer's
personal notebooks before donating the original albums to the
French State in 1979. A catalogue, prefaced by the major French
collector and friend of Lartigue, Roger Thèrond, will be
published in conjunction with this historic exhibition. Thèrond's
exceptional collection of photographs was exhibited recently at
the Maison Europèenne de la Photographie, Paris, under
the title Une Passion franáaise.
Lartigue (French, 1894-1986) took his first photograph in 1900,
at the age of six. At seven, he acquired his first camera as a
birthday gift. The young Jacques-Henri reveled in photography's
magic power to preserve everyday moments of joy so that they could
be infinitely revived. He photographed obsessively, carefully
keeping his pictures in diaries, alongside anecdotes and sketches,
all meant, as he put it, to "trap" the very "scent of happiness".
Lartigue's
early photographs record the dawn of a century elated by the conquest
of speed and flight. Making full use of faster emulsions and shutter
speeds, the young Lartigue captured the accelerated movement of
modern times: the first public flight of an airplane in France
(1904), the wonderful new sports cars, the swift exchanges of
tennis players, and the burlesque antics of family and friends
romping with makeshift racers and flying machines.
Born into privilege-- Lartigue's father was a banker, and the
family belonged to the upper French bourgeoisie-- Lartigue transfixed
the delightful life of the pre-War leisure class. His fleeting
visions of seaside resorts, and of Ladies of fashion, gliding
down the pathways of the Bois de Boulogne and parading at the
races, reflect a passionate devotion to the pursuit of joy.
The adult Lartigue trained as a painter. Photography however remained
a privileged activity. Lartigue's photographs of sun-drenched
holidays on the French Riviera between the Wars crystallize the
image of a glamorous era. A dashing figure himself, Lartigue turned
his camera on the supremely elegant women who surrounded him:
Bibi (Lartigueís first wife), Florette, and the mysterious Renèe
Perle.
Lartigue's photographic work remained undiscovered until 1962
when a chance meeting with John Szarkowski led to a retrospective
at the Museum of Modern Art in New York in 1963. The importance
of the work was immediately recognized, and numerous exhibitions
and publications followed. Free of any influence, Lartigue was
hailed by his friend Richard Avedon as "the most deceptively simple
and penetrating photographer.