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An amusing portrait of the English at work and at play in the industrial north of the country. Photographs by Henri Cartier Bresson. Broadcasted only once, in the cultural program Tempo, in 1963, on the ITV/ABC channel. The photographs filmed in the title box are cropped and augmented with tenderly ironic commentary on the English, inspired by Cartier-Bresson’s notes for this commission.
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20m
Contacts, Vol. 1: The Great Tradition of Photojournalism
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12m
Contacts
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429m
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Widely acclaimed as one of history's most influential figures in the photographic field, Henri Cartier-Bresson, now in his 90th year, gives a revealing interview about his life, work, ideas and beliefs to coincide with three major London exhibitions.
Contributors include fellow photographers Eve Arnold and Lord Snowdon, art historian Ernst Gombrich and Lord
Healey.
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50m
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26m
Photo: A History from behind the Lens
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312m
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26m
Photo: A History from behind the Lens
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312m
Henri Cartier-Bresson - Biographie eines Blicks
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Heinz Bütler interviews Henri Cartier-Bresson (1908-2004) late in life. Cartier-Bresson pulls out photographs, comments briefly, and holds them up to Bütler's camera. A few others share observations, including Isabelle Huppert, Arthur Miller, and Josef Koudelka. Cartier-Bresson talks about his travels, including Mexico in the 1930s, imprisonment during World War II, being with Gandhi moments before his assassination, and returning to sketching late in life. He shows us examples. He talks about becoming and being a photographer, about composition, and about some of his secrets to capture the moment.