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Course landaise

Photograph
1949 (photographed), 1950-64 (printed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Brassaï was born in 1899 as Gyula Halász in the Transylvanian town of Brassó. He grew up in Budapest and spent the early 1920s in Berlin, training as a painter and working as a journalist. He moved to Paris in 1924, where he stayed until his death in 1984. He took up photography in Paris initially to support his written journalism, though he soon committed himself to a solely photographic practice. Brassaï is most well-known for his images of Parisian life, featuring brothels, prostitutes, city streets, architecture and high society alike. His first book, ‘Paris by Night’, was published in 1933 and established his reputation as a serious photographer.

Later in his career, Brassaï photographed other areas in France and abroad. This work feels less dramatic than his earlier Parisian images, but maintains a recognisable, formal aesthetic that he had, by this point, mastered.


Object details

Category
Object type
TitleCourse landaise (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Gelatin silver print mounted to wooden board
Brief description
Photograph by Brassaï, 'Course landaise', Bayonne, 1949. Printed for exhibition 1950-64, gelatin silver print mounted on wooden board.
Physical description
Black and white photograph depicting large crowds surrounging a bullfight. The scene takes place in a leafy, tree-filled park with a church in the background. To the left, a man can be seen climbing up a tree.
Dimensions
  • Image width: 40cm (Note: image, paper and board are the same size)
  • Image height: 49.9cm (Note: image, paper and board are the same size)
Content description
Bullfighting
Styles
Marks and inscriptions
Verso: Bottom right, stamped in black ink: '© Succession Estate BRASSAÏ' Bottom right, stamped in black ink: 'SUCCESSION / BRASSAÏ / ESTATE' Bottom right, black ink on white masking tape: 'CO.668.[7 or Z?]+5 [underlined] (1949)'
Credit line
Bequest of Gilberte Boyer Brassaï
Object history
This object came to the museum as part of a bequest of 99 photographs by Brassaï from his widow, Madame Gilberte Boyer.
Subjects depicted
Place depicted
Summary
Brassaï was born in 1899 as Gyula Halász in the Transylvanian town of Brassó. He grew up in Budapest and spent the early 1920s in Berlin, training as a painter and working as a journalist. He moved to Paris in 1924, where he stayed until his death in 1984. He took up photography in Paris initially to support his written journalism, though he soon committed himself to a solely photographic practice. Brassaï is most well-known for his images of Parisian life, featuring brothels, prostitutes, city streets, architecture and high society alike. His first book, ‘Paris by Night’, was published in 1933 and established his reputation as a serious photographer.

Later in his career, Brassaï photographed other areas in France and abroad. This work feels less dramatic than his earlier Parisian images, but maintains a recognisable, formal aesthetic that he had, by this point, mastered.
Bibliographic reference
Anne Willkes Tucker, Brassaï: The Eye of Paris, Houston, TX: Museum of Fine Arts (1999), plate 132
Collection
Accession number
E.910-2014

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Record createdApril 15, 2015
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