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As a little boy of seven or eight, Jacques Henri Lartigue was given
his first camera, and soon was developing his own photographs. Born
into a prosperous family, from childhood Lartigue acutely observed
the social rituals of the upper echelons of society through his
photography. The hand-held Kodak camera, first introduced in 1888,
granted the young photographer flexibility to capture the fine
details of eccentric family members at home, the elaborate social
parade in the Bois de Boulogne, on the beach in Normandy and
beyond. Classic images of motor cars and high fashion sit alongside
previously unpublished photographs from the Lartigue archive. These
images of family beau-monde and demi-monde life are not only
evidence of a prodigious talent, but also offer an intimate,
adolescent perspective of Belle-Epoque Paris, the world of Proust,
Debussy and the Nabis, before the outbreak of the First World War.
At a young age Lartigue mastered the medium of photography: this
exploration of his extraordinary childhood is interwoven with a
social and cultural portrait of the Belle Epoque. Bonnard and
Vuillard used the camera as a reference point for painting, Eugene
Atget documented the architecture of the old Paris ahead of its
developers, but Lartigue was the first to harness the immediacy of
the snapshot, often capturing his subjects mid-gesture as in real
life, creating a new visual language for the 20th century.
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