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Gisèle Freund’s gorgeous photographs of modernist heroes
06.02.2014
01:23 pm
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James Joyce
James Joyce
 
German-born French photographer Gisèle Freund had one fascinating life. She was a student of Adorno in the 1930s and fled Germany for France and eventually Argentina during World War II. Her portrait of James Joyce—a notoriously difficult get—appeared on the May 8, 1939, cover of Time Magazine. In the 1950s her “liberal” views got her into trouble with the McCarthyites. Her luxurious photos of Eva Perón, which appeared in Life Magazine in 1950, got the magazine banned in Argentina (and also precipitated her departure from that country).
 
Gisèle Freund
Gisèle Freund, self-portrait
 
In 1983 she was named Chevalier de la Légion d’honneur, the highest decoration in France, and eight years later she became the first photographer to be honored with a retrospective at the Musée National d’art Moderne in Paris. Of her gift for portraiture, she said, “When you do not like human beings, you cannot make good portraits.” These marvelous pics of an astonishing range of painters and writers are at once slightly affected (Cocteau and the hand) and wonderfully intimate.
 
Henri Matisse
Henri Matisse
 
Virginia Woolf
Virginia Woolf
 
Jean Cocteau
Jean Cocteau
 
Simone de Beauvoir
Simone de Beauvoir
 
More photos after the jump…
 

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Posted by Martin Schneider
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06.02.2014
01:23 pm
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