“THE NEW YORKER”
Happy Birthday, Henri Cartier-Bresson
Henri Cartier-Bresson travelled the world for four decades, both
documenting and participating in the art, political, and social
movements that would move twentieth-century culture from the old to the
modern world. Originally a student of Surrealist painting,
Cartier-Bresson was advised by Gertrude Stein, after she saw one of his
paintings, that he’d be better off joining his family’s textile
business. Instead he committed to photography, and a new type of fast
portable camera: the Leica. He eventually become one of the first
photographers to join the famed photo cooperative Magnum. “Joining
Magnum didn’t mean leaving a coherent artistic sphere for an alien job;
and being a photo-journalist didn’t mean being a photographer,” the
scholar and photo-curator Peter Galassi writes. “It meant being a
student, a diplomat, a traveler, an investigator, a reporter, a
historian. To Cartier-Bresson it meant engaging the whole of the world.”
Today, in honor of Cartier-Bresson’s birthday, we take a look at some
of the more celebratory photographs from his extraordinary career.
All photographs by Henri Cartier-Bresson/Magnum.