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Full Version: Photographers of the World - Part II
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Born in Chanteloup, Cartier-Bresson started painting in 1923 and began to photograph in 1931, met Tériade, the editor of Verve magazine and frequented members of the French surrealist movement. After a trip to the Ivory Coast he discovered the Leica, since then his camera of choice.

He pursued his photographic career in Eastern Europe and Mexico, later on making films with Jean Renoir, Jacques Becker and André Zvoboda and a documentary on Republican Spain (1937).

A war prisoner, he escaped in 1940 and made portraits of artists: Matisse, Rouault, Braque, Bonnard. In 1945 he photographed and covered the liberation of Paris with a group of professional journalists before filming the 1946 documentary \"Le Retour\" (The Return) and spending a year in the US to complete a \"posthumous\" exhibition initiated by New York\'s Museum of Modern Art out of a belief that he was dead.

In 1947 he founded Magnum Photos with Bill Vandivert, Robert Capa, George Rodger and David Seymour \"Chim\", then spent three years in India, Burma, Pakistan, Indonesia and China (during the last six months of the Kuomintang and the first six months of the People\'s Republic of China). In 1952 he returned to Europe and in 1954 was the first foreign photographer admitted into the USSR.

He subsequently travelled to China, Cuba in the 1960s, Mexico, Canada, the USA, India and Japan among other countries. In 1968 he began to curtail his photography and follow his passion for drawing and painting.

It almost seems a travesty that Bresson could forsake his art of taking pictures, but nevertheless he adamantly asserts that, \"All I care about these days is painting - photography has never been more than a way into painting, a sort of instant drawing.\"

Best known for his concept of the \"decisive moment\" in photography, Cartier-Bresson is the recipient of an extraordinary number of prizes, awards and honorary doctorates, among which the Overseas Press Club of America Award (1948, 1954, 1960, 1964), The A.S.M.P. Award (1953), the Prix de la Société Française de Photographie (1959), the Culture Prize, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Photographie (1975).


Bresson died 3rd August, 2004.

Below are some of the wellknown works of the Maestro.
Wow....Asif bhaia...pretty fast progress in your topics!! Not a lazy person like me I guess. And thanks for these excellent descriptions of few of the wonders in World Photography. Keep it up.

*One thing though, I found them a bit too long. Instead of giving so much information at a time, you can give us a link to know more.
asif vaiiiiiiiii
great work man
u do something great by doing this
atleast amra to kisu valo photographer er sathe porichito hote parbo

plzz keep posting
dont stop plzzzzzzzzz
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