Exhibition
Charbonnier and Sutkus
Free love

Jean-Paul Sartre à Nida 1965, Tirage argentique de 1991 signé © Antanas Sutkus Courtesy RTR Galerie

Les rockers de Saint Paul, 1974 © Jean-Philippe Charbonnier Courtesy RTR Galerie

Marathon on University Street 1959 ©Antanas Sutkus Courtesy RTR Galerie

Paris, 14 juillet 1945 Tirage d'époque signé ©Jean-Philippe Charbonnier Courtesy RTR Galerie

Vilnius 1959 Tirage moderne signé ©Antanas Sutkus Courtesy RTR Galerie

Paris, les coulisses des Folies Bergère 1960 Tirage d'époque signé ©Jean-Philippe Charbonnier Courtesy RTR Galerie

Pionnier aveugle Tirage argentique signé ©Antanas Sutkus Courtesy RTR Galerie

Edith Piaf 27 / 9 /1962 Tirage d'époque signé ©Jean-Philippe Charbonnier Courtesy RTR Galerie

La main de la mère. Vilnius 1966 ©Antanas Sutkus Courtesy RTR Galerie

Comme au Moyen Âge 1976 ©Jean-Philippe Charbonnier Courtesy RTR Galerie

Antanas Sutkus Retrospektyva 479 pages Éditions Sapnu, Vilnius
You asked me: “Why did I love? Why did I live? " Antanas Sutkus, 2012
RTR Gallery, in collaboration with the Agathe Gaillard Gallery, presents "Free Love" an exhibition featuring 45 mainly vintage prints by Jean-Philippe Charbonnier and Antanas Sutkus, two renowned masters of humanist photography.
The photographer is a lover, a brother, a friend. He is filled with love for the other, and the image is both a medium and his message to those he photographs. This is certainly what Sutkus and Charbonnier are and defend at the same time, even though, separated by several thousand miles and working in very different settings.
Jean-Philippe Charbonnier was feted during the post war economic boom years, a few decades of prosperity alongside Cartier-Bresson, Doisneau, Boubat, Ronis, at a time when French society was profoundly transformed through wealth and when little by little , the world of traditional peasant farmers changed and disappeared, the “small people” of pre-War were replaced and we see the emergence of a new class of urbanites, educated, middle class or elite in search of pleasure, amusement and levity. The photographer captures small moments, with a look that is often ironic, sometimes tender, resting his gaze on his peers, rich or poor, famous or anonymous. This is not an exercise, he is fully committed to his pictures, carefully avoiding value judgment, placing himself beyond conventions or social games: "One makes good picture after several trips after the elimination of exoticism, folklorism, His photographs seek only the essence of the human , relegating the existential to the background. As one speaks of the eternal feminine, he searches for the eternally human as in: "I think we met before" (name of the first exhibition at Galerie Agathe Gaillard Jean-Philippe Charbonnier, 1974)
At the same time, Sutkus seeks the essence of the human in a country [Lithuania] engulfed in Sovietism (the Lithuanians call this period the Occupation). His look, his photos are filled with warmth and tenderness for his contemporaries, occasionally touched by humour, the ultimate weapon against totalitarianism. The intention is however not to denounce the regime, which is rarely featured in the images, but simply to reassert the importance of humanity as a quality and a character trait. Look at these portraits of Sartre at the beginning of the 1960s, visiting a Lithuanian beach, his raincoat inflated by an unexpected gust of wind.
He was invited by the authorities of 'brotherly country' who organized this symbolic getaway on the Baltic, and it was Antanas Sutkus, who was chosen to immortalize this propaganda exercise. The result: portrait of a man wandering alone in the dunes and in wind (the sea is invisible), a little worn out, far from his status as The existentialist philosopher.
Charbonnier, when confronted with celebrity, also refutes the need to respect the archetype of the public image, on the contrary he sets out searching for what one would call today the intimate person. In this manner he creates a disarming portrait of Piaf, far removed from the official iconography, Bettina is finally brought down from her pedestal of supermodel to be revealed as nothing more than herself, and is made happy by that brief pause/ pose.
"It's the photography who takes photographs," Charbonnier said. Sutkus has the same conviction: "The photo takes itself alone, I am only the instrument." Antanas Sutkus and Jean-Philippe Charbonnier used photography as a link between individuals, a means of empathy and love of the other, which is essential to achieve freedom, whether in a world that is changing or in a rigid political system.
Bernard Perrine
Bernard.Perrine1@orange.fr
Jean-Philippe Charbonnier
Antanas Sutkus
Amours libres
Through May 19, 2012
Book
Antanas Sutkus
Retrospektyva
Editions Sapnu, Vilnius, 479 pages
Galerie RTR
42 rue Volta
75003 Paris
+33 (0)1 45 26 04 46
+33 (0) 6 63 20 23 39
info@rtrgallery.com
Links
http://www.rtrgallery.com
http://www.agathegaillard.com
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