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Édouard Boubat

 
Photography Encyclopedia: Édouard Boubat

Boubat, Édouard (1923-99), French photographer. The poet Jacques Prévert called him a ‘peace photographer’, for Boubat was the incarnation of the French humanist, member of a movement without ideology or militants whose urge to capture the simple beauty of everyday life distinguishes their work. His first image, of a tiny girl wearing an outfit of fallen leaves in the Luxembourg gardens, was made in 1946 and became a classic. A photoengraver by trade until 1950, his personal work, especially that featuring his muse Lella, indicated unusual talent.

Working under the inspired editorship of Bertie Gilou for the innovative magazine Réalités 1950-75, Boubat flourished as a globetrotting photojournalist, but for a magazine that concerned itself more with science, industry, and economic development than with war or conflict. The role suited his temperament, for it allowed him to make small groups of images around a loosely defined subject, rather than detailed picture stories. His dictum was ‘To photograph is to express gratitude.’ His work dealt with simple domestic and personal events, or work, trade, and industry. His ‘personal’ photography produced a charming body of images, where the nude, children, cats, and his own family figure extensively.

— Peter Hamilton

Bibliography

  • Boubat, É., La Vie est belle (1999).
  • Boubat, É., Le Guérisseur du temps, ed. B. Boubat (2004)
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Edouard Boubat (September 13, 1923, Paris, France – June 30, 1999, Paris) was a well known French art photographer. He was born in Montmartre, Paris. After studying typography and graphic arts at the Ecole Estienne, he worked in a printing company but dreamed of being a photographer. After WWII he decided to go for his passion and become a photographer. He focused on the poetic aspect of life and things. He took his first photograph in 1946 in reaction to the banality and horrors of the Second World War and was successful immediately, receiving the Kodak Prize the following year. Afterwards he travelled the world for the magazine Realites, but always kept a special interest in photographing his hometown, Paris. He sought to make photographs that were a celebration of life. The French poet Jacques Prévert called him a "Peace Correspondent." His son Bernard is also a photographer.

Reading

Edouard Boubat : The Monograph. (Harry N. Abrams, Inc. 2004).

Photographies 1950-1987 (publ. Éditions du Désastre, 1988) ISBN 2-87770-001-1

Edouard Boubat 324 photographs, Bernard Boubat, Genevieve Anhoury (Thames & Hudson ISBN 0-500-51201-9

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Photography Encyclopedia. The Oxford Companion to the Photograph. Copyright © 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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