

Henri Cartier-Bresson: The Modern Century : Galassi, Peter: desertcart.co.uk: Books Review: One of the greats of photography. - HCB is one of the great seminal photographers associated with the Magnum foundation. To understand the essence of photography his work has to be delicately viewed and reviewed. Simply, he was the best. I bought this book to source valuable information and references for my dissertation which focussed on surrealism and existentialism. Review: Great book - Excellent book ...
| Best Sellers Rank | 2,964,634 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 2,140 in Individual Photographer Monographs 7,981 in Photography Collections & Exhibitions 18,704 in Individual Artists |
| Customer reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (128) |
| Dimensions | 24.89 x 4.06 x 30.99 cm |
| Edition | Illustrated |
| ISBN-10 | 0870707787 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0870707780 |
| Item weight | 2.52 kg |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 376 pages |
| Publication date | 30 April 2010 |
| Publisher | Museum of Modern Art |
W**P
One of the greats of photography.
HCB is one of the great seminal photographers associated with the Magnum foundation. To understand the essence of photography his work has to be delicately viewed and reviewed. Simply, he was the best. I bought this book to source valuable information and references for my dissertation which focussed on surrealism and existentialism.
L**L
Great book
Excellent book ...
T**N
excellent
Quick delivery, excellent product
M**O
The best selection
Just to be short, I am not a big fan of Cartier-Bresson. In my eyes, he is the Picasso of photography, good, but a little bit dated. But if you want to have a good idea of his work, this is probably the best selection ever made. Besides, the printing is brilliant.
S**R
First impressions
First impressions are important, although they can be misleading. The dustjacket of this book is a graphic design disaster. The eye is first assaulted by a combination of plum red and intense egg-yolk yellow. Once the senses have become acclimatized to this almost nausea inducing juxtaposition of colours, once notices the ugly typeface of the title; it bears a distinct similarity to the one that was used for Wild West "wanted" posters. The eyes now take in the text of the title, "Henri Cartier-Bresson" (obviously nothing wrong with that) "the Modern Century" - the what? Have I missed something? Is this now the accepted "name" for the 20th Century? No, it isn't. Each century is, or was "modern" at some stage. I think it would be fair to say the 21st Century is and is likely to remain for some time, modern. The title is silly. Lastly one notices a small picture imbedded in the text; a photograph taken by H.C-B, but a poor choice of image for the cover. It's a pity that MOMA didn't employ the splendid German publishers Schirmer & Mosel, not only to design the book/catalogue, but also to give the exhibition and catalogue a better title. The German edition of this tome has an attractive and appropriately black and white dustjacket and is entitled "Henri Cartier-Bresson, his 20th Century" ("Henri Cartier-Bresson, sein 20. Jahrhundert") However - of course this is all of less consequence than the content of the book, which is indeed good. There are several photographs here one has either not seen for a long time, or not at all. The images are beautifully printed on satisfyingly thick paper. True, many are on rather a small scale, but this was presumably the only solution if so many illustrations were to be included and the book was not to become unmanageably large and prohibitively expensive. Doubtless, this was also the reason for omitting the black borders one associates with Cartier-Bresson's photographs. Naturally the choice of photographs and the decision, which ones were to be printed large, which small was subjective, but on the whole the selection is a good one. The text is, as you'd expect with a retrospective exhibition, exhaustive and informative; even the most obsessive Cartier-Bresson enthusiast is likely to find something there they didn't know. Unfortunately, the author Peter Galassi, occasionally descends into "intellectualese", which slightly mars ones enjoyment, as it serves no purpose other than to obfuscate what he's presumably trying to communicate. He also indulges in criticism of previous publications on Cartier-Bresson which, in view of his own publication's deficiencies, is an urge he should perhaps have resisted. I have one other, minor gripe and this is the anachronistic use of place names; Beijing for Peking, Mumbai for Bombay, St. Petersburg for Leningrad etc. For example, in 1958 no one, certainly not outside China, used the name Beijing; to alter Cartier-Bresson's original text to suit contemporary American "taste", is a travesty. This is arguably not the best book on Cartier-Bresson, but it is undoubtedly one of the best. It's a volume that has, with the exception of the dustjacket, grown on me. If you have an interest in the work of the late, great Henri Cartier-Bresson, or good photography, you should acquire it. On the other hand, if you're fluent in German I recommend you buy their edition; it will look better on your bookshelves and the content is, apart from the obvious difference, identical. Except that the Germans, I'm glad to say, have stuck with "Peking".
A**N
The most generous collection...but possibly not the best
This collection has probably the most generous inclusion of previously unpublished or little published work, but although I return to it frequently I remain unsure that it is necessarily the best. I think I prefer the Thames & Hudson collections. The print sizes in the T&H titles are usually larger and generally the printing is better. The other slightly strange thing is that I realise how used I have become to seeing HC-B's pictures with the black key-lines (the negative edges) he insisted on as an indication that the image was uncropped and seen as he intended. THE MODERN CENTURY does away with the black edges and to me this makes the prints look a little naked on the page. Most will not be bothered by this. There is remarkable work in this new collection, of course -- but possibly too much of it. The placing of multiple pictures on the page reduces rather than increases their impact, and introduces a tendency in the reader to skim in a way that I don't think you do when the publication has one picture per page. I'll give an example. On p.203 there is an extraordinary photograph -- but it isn't immediately evident just how extraordinary it is. It isn't terribly sharp and it isn't terribly well printed. It shows young women dancing as apart of the parade during the celebrations of the People's Republic of China's ninth anniversary. I had turned the page before I realised that every figure as far as the eye can see in the photograph ha both feet simultaneously off the ground. What in other hands would have been a rather workaday journalism assignment in HC-B's hands becomes a little miracle of timing (and editing). But somehow, this present collection seems to require harder work than any other HC-B title I have to mine out the marvels. They are there. But I'm still not quite sure that the presentation and printing do them full justice.
D**E
When I look at modern photo exhibitions I feel nostalgic for the excellence of Bresson. A creative genius who combined intuition and feel for geometry with great decisive moments. Good collection of his major works and the text at the beginning excellent.
L**N
Me propuse hacerme con toda la obra de HCB, pero este libro me ha sorprendido. Una encuadernación exquisita, toda la información posible, incluso los mapas que permiten tener un recorrido de sus viajes fotográficos. Uno de mis favoritos de HCB a un precio excelente para lo que es. Muy recomendable.
T**E
If you are uncertain as to how great a street photographer he is, then get this book. There are so many smart photographs, it is both inspiring and deeply humbling. If you want to be inspired and humbled, then get this book!
C**T
One of the absolutely best photo books I have in my collection. The stories, letters and photographs are simply awe inspiring and you gained significant insight about an unusual man and his travels and photography. Cartier-Bresson ranks at the top of who may very well be the best photographer of our time. I doubt few would argue that point. I knew the size of the book but it seemed even bigger when I go it and definitely heavier. The binding was superb and printing about as good as it gets. Any fan of this man, his works and photography in general would do well to have this book in their library of great ones.
K**P
I saw an exhibit of Cartier-Bresson's work a few months back at the Museum of Modern Art in NYC, but instead of purchasing the book at the museum, decided to order it from amazon.com. I got a brand new copy (wrapped) and saved approximately $15 (of what it would have cost me at the museum shop!) The book arrived very quickly. It is absolutely beautiful. The reproduction of these stunning photographs by this world-renowned photographer is incredibly well-done and it is a wonderful book to own and to share with anyone who appreciates good photography. Or just appreciates the moments in a lifetime, because this is what Cartier-Bresson captures...little moments, big moments but mostly moments when his subjects were not even aware they were being photographed. There are photos from all over the world and spanning many decades, some celebrities, but lots of ordinary men, women and children as well. I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in photography and art. You will be mesmerized by his work.
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