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Philippe
Halsman, The Frenchman


Philippe Halsman, The Frenchman
Hausmann, Viktoria (ED)
Halsman, Philippe / Buchwald, Art
Hardcover, 175 x 235 mm (6.9 x 9.3 in.), 108 pages
TASCHEN BOOKS
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book
NEW
BOOKS
Philippe Halsman, The Frenchman
Making
faces: a highly original visual Q&A with France’s
most beloved comic actor
In New York in 1948, photographer Philippe Halsman
had a chance meeting with Fernandel, a French movie star from
the vaudeville tradition, and asked the actor to participate
in a completely original photographic experiment. Halsman would
ask Fernandel questions about America to which he would respond
using only facial expressions. With his wide, lovable horse-face,
Fernandel mimicked the answers to such questions as “Does the
average Frenchman still pinch pretty girls in a crowd?” (silly
grin) and “What was your reaction to the great American game
of baseball?” (perplexed). Fernandel’s reactions are laugh-out-loud
funny, and the book that resulted from this unusual collaboration
is nothing short of wonderful. The Frenchman has been out of
print for over fifty years, but TASCHEN’s reprint thankfully
brings it back to life.
The photographer: Philippe Halsman (1906-1979) was born in Latvia
but established his career in Paris in the 1930s, quickly becoming
one of the country’s most famous portrait photographers. In 1940,
he emigrated from France to the United States, where his career
promptly soared as he began working for LIFE magazine, photographing
such stars as Marilyn Monroe and Brigitte Bardot and completing
a record 101 LIFE covers. His original style of portraiture brought
a candid feeling to even the most elaborately posed photographs;
Halsman had a keen talent for finding ways to capture the psychology
of his subjects, often revealing hidden depths of their personalities.
For his famous “jump” series, he photographed his subjects—including
President Nixon and the Duke and Duchess of Windsor—as they jumped
in the air. His photograph of Dali with a cat, canvas, and water
all suspended in midair is one of the most famous images of the
painter. Halsman’s contributions to the art of portraiture are
innumerable, and his photographs will forever remain the defining
images of mid-century American popular culture.
Editions:
English: 3-8228-4641-4 (November 2005)
French: 3-8228-4665-1 (November 2005)
German: 3-8228-4666-X (November 2005)
Spanish: 3-8228-4843-3 (November 2005)
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