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Title

Bijou au bar de la Lune, Paris

1932

Artist

George Brassai

Romania, France

1899 – 1984

No image
  • Details

    Other Title
    Portrait of a French lady
    Date
    1932
    Media category
    Photograph
    Materials used
    gelatin silver photograph
    Dimensions
    28.5 x 22.0 cm image (irreg.); 30.4 x 23.4 cm sheet
    Signature & date

    Signed l.r. sheet, fibre-tipped pen "Brassai". Dated c.verso, pencil "...1932 [-1933 rubbed out]".

    Credit
    Bequest of Patrick White 1991
    Location
    Not on display
    Accession number
    100.1991.10
    Artist information
    George Brassai

    Works in the collection

    3

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  • About

    ‘I was inspired to become a photographer by my desire to translate all the things that enchanted me in the nocturnal Paris I was experiencing.’ Brassaï 1933 1

    Considered by Henry Miller to be the ‘eye of Paris’, Brassaï (born Gyula Halász) studied painting in Budapest and Berlin before moving to France in 1924. There he worked as a newspaper correspondent and interacted with the core of surrealist activity: Georges Bataille, André Masson, Tristan Tzara and Le Corbusier, for instance. Inspired by André Kertész, Brassaï turned to photography and took to Paris at night, capturing the nocturnal milieu of cafés, bars, brothels and the intimacies of the street. Although not formally part of the surrealist group (he declined an invitation to join citing a protest at their lack of objectivity) he worked for the surrealist journal ‘Minotaure’ contributing images to illustrate texts such as Breton’s ‘La nuit du tournesol’ (no 7, 1935) which recorded sites of Breton’s experiences with ‘l’amour fou’.

    ‘Filles de Montmartre’ 1932 (AGNSW collection) portrays two women drinking in a bar, playing dice and perhaps plying their trade. Brassaï has captured them in an intimate moment of friendship, sitting near a service area with the bar bills and glasses behind them. An intricate triangularity of gazes is established: the photographer’s at the women, theirs at him and the reflected barman who watches the interaction. The trick of the light gives an almost transparent feel to parts of the photograph; the girl on the left who seems to fade out of the image mirrors the complex shadowing, movement and doubling of form to the right.

    In contrast, in ‘Bijou au bar de la Lune, Paris’ the heavily made up and bejewelled Bijou drinks alone, portraying an air of confidence that reveals her familiarity with the scene. A cigarette lies by her feet as if hurriedly discarded on the approach of Brassaï, the spontaneity of the moment reflecting his humble appreciation of reality: ‘the most everyday event that leads to the extraordinary.’ 2

    1. Johnson B ed 2004, ‘Photography speaks: 150 photographers on their art’, Aperture, New York p 146
    2. Naylor C ed 1988, ‘Contemporary photographers encyclopaedia of photography’, 2nd edn, St James Press, Chicago p 119

    © Art Gallery of New South Wales Photography Collection Handbook, 2007

  • Bibliography

    Referenced in 1 publication

Other works by George Brassai