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Gare du Nord: Dutch photographers in Paris 1900-1968 on view at the Hague Museum of Photography
In the 1950s, Paris quickly recovered its pre-war attractiveness.
THE HAGUE.- Paris was where it was at. It was the place to be. For decades the sparkling nightlife and intellectual ferment of the French capital attracted writers and artists from around the world. Among them were Dutch photographers, who flocked to Paris to capture romantic images of life in the city’s streets. In this exhibition, pictures snapped by photographers like Henri Berssenbrugge, Emmy Andriesse, Ed van der Elsken and Johan van der Keuken bring to life the twentieth-century metropolis that plays the starring role in the Gemeentemuseum Den Haag’s concurrent exhibition Paris, City of modern art.

Paris shares a long history with photography; it is the birthplace of the medium. It would become the city of modern art, but it was the capital of photography right from the moment when Louis Daguerre first presented his discovery to the world in 1839. Dutch photographers were already going there in the 1920s and ’30s to study the discipline at specialist schools or in the hope of learning the profession by working as assistants to renowned practitioners like Man Ray or Berenice Abbott.

In the 1950s, Paris quickly recovered its pre-war attractiveness; the city had lost nothing of its glamour in the intervening years and it held a strong appeal for the generation of twenty-year-olds who were now discovering the world. The photo-books about Paris published between 1954 and 1963 by Nico Jesse, Ed van der Elsken and Johan van der Keuken were immediately hugely popular. They show a dream world far from the petty and restrictive Dutch society of the period; the most photographed city in the world held out the prospect of a more intense and adventurous life. These books did much to create the alluring image of Paris that still exists in the collective consciousness of the Dutch population.

Nico Jesse’s 1954 photo-book Vrouwen van Parijs (‘Women of Paris’) gives a light-hearted and romantic view of the city. Jesse – a family doctor as well as a passionate photographer – photographed no fewer than 2000 women in the space of ten days. His portraits of actresses, students, mannequins and female vagrants offered a fascinating glimpse behind the scenes of Paris and introduced the Dutch public to the ‘Parisienne’ in all her different facets.

In his 1956 photo novel Een liefdesgeschiedenis in Saint Germain de Prés (also published as Love on the Left Bank), Ed van der Elsken offered a rather different view of the city. He had been living in Paris for a number of years and therefore had more opportunity to photograph real street life. He hung around with a group of existentialist young people whom he photographed regularly. They became the main characters in his (fictive) love story, which portrayed a rougher and tougher side of Parisian life (in particular that of the bohemian artists in and around the Quartier Latin).

Gare du Nord showcases work by around fifty Dutch photographers. Exhibits will include images not only of anonymous street life, but also of celebrities like Orson Welles, Juliette Gréco, Christian Dior and the still extremely young Brigitte Bardot and Yves Saint Laurent. In addition, there will be a chance to see two short experimental films: Joris Ivens’ 1927 film Études des mouvements à Paris (Studies of Movements in Paris) and De Hallen van Parijs (also known as Les Halles de Paris) made by Paul Schuitema in 1939. The latter was digitized last year by Eye Film Institute Netherlands and is now for the first time available to the general public.



Today's News

January 2, 2012

Uffizi Gallery presents sculptures from the collections of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany

Vanity: Fashion photography from the F.C. Gundlach Collection at Kunsthalle in Vienna

Painting on Paper: Josef Albers in America exhibition on view at Kunstmuseum Basel

Homage to Marianne Langen: Works from the collection at the Langen Foundation

Ancient Art of India: Masterworks of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art on view in Mexico City

Monet, Renoir and Cézanne return to the Fitzwilliam as famous artworks go back on display

Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University presents The Legend of Rex Slinkard

Kunstmuseum Bonn is first German museum to show a solo exhibition of Laura Owens' work

Gare du Nord: Dutch photographers in Paris 1900-1968 on view at the Hague Museum of Photography

The Whitney Museum presents Aleksandra Mir's The Seduction of Galilelo Galilei

Exhibition of Japanese prints by Tsukioka Kogyo to open at Bonnefantenmuseum

Exhibition of faces of African Americans who lived in Columbia opens in South Carolina

DeCordova Sculpture Park and Museum to present Gary Webb's first US museum exhibition

Christopher Baker's Hello World! debuts at gallery's first ever screening room

Winners announced for new museum garden design

Exhibition of new works by designer Thaddeus Wolfe at Volume Gallery

Galveston ferry may be Texas' best tourist bargain

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1.- Mexican archaeologists study cave paintings found in the northeast part of Argentina

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3.- Top of the bill: Giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman sails into Hong Kong

4.- Researchers say first permanent English settlers in America resorted to cannibalism

5.- Russia's great museums feud over revival plan of Moscow museum of Western art

6.- Dartmouth's Hood Museum appoints first African Art Curator

7.- Survey exhibition of American artist Ellen Gallagher's work opens at Tate Modern

8.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

9.- Paris Photo Los Angeles concludes a successful first edition with over 13,500 visitors

10.- Excavation unearths evidence of Thessaloniki's urban life between 4th and 9th centuries AD



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