ID: 39680
Omschrijving
Robert Doisneau - Les Doigts Pleins d\'Encre
Uitgeverij: Hoëbeke, 2013
Hardcover, 90 pagina\'s
Afmetingen: 31.8x23.8cm
Staat: Gelezen, goed
Gratis verzending
The great photographer Robert Doisneau (1912-1994) was always committed to saving from oblivion the daily life of the suburbs and their inhabitants. With a lively and tender glance, he knew how to render the poetry of the streets, his humor too. Among the thousands of pictures taken by him, some images have become true modern icons, such as \"The Kiss of the Town Hall\". But over all of his work, the photographs that have always had his preference, those that he continued to look at with pleasure, are his photos of children.
Les Doigts Pleins d\'Encre invites us to delve into our memory: the tussles in the playground, the exploits of vacant lots and crazy races in roller skates; all the pleasures of childhood are restored here and the children of today will discover, thanks to these photos, that their grandparents were also ten years old.
What Doisneau photographed before and after the war by going to class or capturing unforgettable images in the street, Cavanna had experienced. He could have been any of these kids photographed in a row, on the blackboard, sitting at a wooden desk or running away after ringing the street bell. All these moving and funny images inspired him to write a text in which he tells us about the life of the Doisneau kids in short pants and crowned knees.
Uitgeverij: Hoëbeke, 2013
Hardcover, 90 pagina\'s
Afmetingen: 31.8x23.8cm
Staat: Gelezen, goed
Gratis verzending
The great photographer Robert Doisneau (1912-1994) was always committed to saving from oblivion the daily life of the suburbs and their inhabitants. With a lively and tender glance, he knew how to render the poetry of the streets, his humor too. Among the thousands of pictures taken by him, some images have become true modern icons, such as \"The Kiss of the Town Hall\". But over all of his work, the photographs that have always had his preference, those that he continued to look at with pleasure, are his photos of children.
Les Doigts Pleins d\'Encre invites us to delve into our memory: the tussles in the playground, the exploits of vacant lots and crazy races in roller skates; all the pleasures of childhood are restored here and the children of today will discover, thanks to these photos, that their grandparents were also ten years old.
What Doisneau photographed before and after the war by going to class or capturing unforgettable images in the street, Cavanna had experienced. He could have been any of these kids photographed in a row, on the blackboard, sitting at a wooden desk or running away after ringing the street bell. All these moving and funny images inspired him to write a text in which he tells us about the life of the Doisneau kids in short pants and crowned knees.