Book
Patrick Chauvel : a living legend

09 Mar 1980, Carribean Sea --- Marguerite Yourcenar left on a carribbean cruise the same day she became the first woman to be admitted to the French Academy. Sensing she might be named, she decided to flee journalists who, however, caught up with her on the liner Mermoz. --- Image by © Patrick Chauvel/Sygma/Corbis

© Corbis, All Rights Reserved photo by Patrick Chauvel

© Corbis, All Rights Reserved photo by Patrick Chauvel

© Corbis, All Rights Reserved photo by Patrick Chauvel

March 1980, Kingston, Jamaica --- Jamaica's "King of Reggae" Bob Marley relaxes at home in Kingston. --- Image by © Patrick Chauvel/Sygma/Corbis

30 Mar 1980, San Salvador, El Salvador --- Funeral of Archibishop Oscar Romero, who was killed on March 23 as he was saying mass. Violent incidents left 38 people dead among the dozens of thousands who attended the ceremony. Victims were shot or died in the panic stampede that followed a bombing. --- Image by © Patrick Chauvel/Sygma/Corbis

22 Jul 1979, Managua, Nicaragua --- Sandinistas patrol outside Managua, where supporters of dictator Somoza try to resist. Sandinistas seized power on July 19, 1979. --- Image by © Patrick Chauvel/Sygma/Corbis

19 May 1980, San Vincente, El Salvador --- Rebels of the LP-28 (Ligas Populares 28 Febrero) training in the mountains. --- Image by © Patrick Chauvel/Sygma/Corbis

19 Jul 1979, Managua, Nicaragua --- After the fall of former dictator Anastasio Somoza, Sandinistas arrive in Managua and are greeted by the population. --- Image by © Patrick Chauvel/Sygma/Corbis

© Corbis, All Rights Reserved photo by Patrick Chauvel

November 1986, Surinam --- A looter, also suspected of treason, is violently put under arrest. In July 1986, Sergeant Ronnie Brunswijk started a guerilla against Colonel Bouterse, leader of the country since his 1980 military coup. --- Image by © Patrick Chauvel/Sygma/Corbis

16 Nov 1989, San Salvador, El Salvador --- FMLN (Frente Farabundo Marti de Liberacion) rebellion has led to violent fighting and shooting between the army and the guerillas. --- Image by © Patrick Chauvel/Sygma/Corbis

© Corbis, All Rights Reserved photo by Patrick Chauvel
09 Mar 1980, Carribean Sea --- Marguerite Yourcenar left on a carribbean cruise the same day she became the first woman to be admitted to the French Academy. Sensing she might be named, she decided to flee journalists who, however, caught up with her on the liner Mermoz. --- Image by © Patrick Chauvel/Sygma/Corbis
“I don't think a journalist should die for his newspaper,” wrote Jean-François Chauvel, Patrick's father, in A rebrousse-poil (Editions Olivier Orban, 1976), a book of reporting stories collected by Philippe Gildas. “If he happens to risk his life, it's for himself, for some idea he has of his craft.” The final chapter of the book is named “As long as there are heroes...”
Good fairies hover over the cribs of most children. Hovering over Patrick Chauvel's crib were big bearded men, men of the world, smokers and drinkers, their breath still stinking of battle and the road. His grandfather was ambassador of France, his father a reporter for the AFP and Le Figaro. His uncle was the filmmaker Pierre Schoendoerffer, who passed away last March 14, on the same day he had arrived in Dien Bien Phu, 58 years earlier.
Patrick Chauvel, who considered Schoendoerffer a father, brother and friend as much as an uncle, was finishing Les pompes de Ricardo Jésus at the time of the filmmaker's death. He was reading the proofs of his book on Sarajevo and shooting a film on the anniversary of the siege of the city, with his friend Rémy Ourdan, a reporter for Le Monde. So it's understandable if a few slips and approximations remain in the text. In any case, they don’t undermine the story.
Patrick was brought up on adventure: his father and uncle toured the Russian cabarets with their friend Joseph Kessel. If they stopped a little too long at one cabaret, they sat little Patrick in one of the red leatherette booths, where he nodded off amid the clouds of smoke and the clinking of glasses.
What do you expect a child who grew up in such an environment to do with his life? He went on to become, more than forty years ago, a Rapporteur de guerre (War Reporter), the title he chose for his first book.
“My father didn't write enough,” Patrick Chauvel told me one Sunday afternoon in the patio of one of his favorite Pigalle bistros, Le Corso.
So Patrick is taking up the challenge. After Rapporteur de guerre was published in 1998 and sold 22,000 copies (according to his current publisher Philippe Robinet), he wrote a “fictionalized account”, Sky, which I consider to be his best book. The story of a friendship that begins in Vietnam and ends in American Indian territory, Sky is no longer in print but can still be found online.
“When you write a story, people ask you what's made up,” says Chauvel. “When you write a novel, people ask you what's true.”
Les pompes de Ricardo Jésus is the story of Patrick's adventures in the 1970s and 80s, the period that precedes the events recounted in Rapporteurs de guerre. The latter ends where the former begins, in Panama, the day he remained four hours in the middle of an intersection. It was 95 degrees in the shade.
“But I was in the sun. My guts were hanging out and bullets were still flying, which is why it took so long for them to come get me. They operated on me. Once I had healed, the surgeons sent me a Polaroid of them posing in the operating room, holding a handful of my guts, making goofy faces and wearing flower-print hats... Can you believe it?”
Yes, Patrick, I believe you!
“You look like you're dead.” Those are the opening words of Les pompes de Ricardo Jésus. Pierre Schoendeoerffer utters them upon seeing a photo of Patrick wounded in Cambodia in April 1974. Patrick wrote these lines as he took his first steps on crutches after taking “a bullet in the left ankle, a present of the Revolutionary Guards in Tabriz” in 1980...
Speaking of Patrick Chauvel's injuries, Jean-François Leroy, director of the Festival Visa pour l'image in Perpignan, and a close friend who collected several remembrances of their numerous friends in common, said: “Patrick's naked body is like a map of all the wars of the past forty years.”
“Pierre, you showed us the way, and you set the bar very high! So let's go!” wrote Patrick Chauvel in the May issue of the monthly magazine Spectacle du Monde dedicated to Pierre Schoendoerffer.
“Let's go.” These words sum up Patrick Chauvel's life. For him, journalism is a way of life. It's not some a Taliban of information. Photography? The obligation to be the first in line, where it's really happening. “I'm not a great photographer,” he says to those who will listen. “But now and then I do take great photos.”
When Jean-François Leroy asked him in Perpignan how it felt to be the on the set photographer for Schoendoerffer's film Dien Bien Phu, he ranswered, “The difference between fiction and reality is that here I can finally take all the pictures that I missed in the field. Plus, it's the first time I've made any money taking pictures of a war.”
The cover photo by Delphine Loyau shows Chauvel looking like a reporter, but also a little like some heavenly hobo. In Miami, eating lobster with some television colleagues, he gets up from the table as he hears a riot breaking out... “Frog, you're nuts. For us, this is a job, we do it for the money!” For Patrick, journalism, photography, cinema, and writing aren't just jobs. They're genuine passions, reasons to live.
“He's a living legend,” says the young photographer Corentin Fohlen, speaking to me from Brittany, where he is on vacation (sic). “I read his books, I saw him in Libya but didn't say anything. I thought that he hadn't noticed me. Then the other week I ran into him at the Négatif+ photo lab. He waved and said to me, 'Don't go to war, it's too dangerous.' Like every young photographer, I'm blown away by everything he does, but I'm not sure I want to live that kind of life.”
“These young photographers I saw in Egypt and Libya, they have no idea,” Patrick Chauvel tells me, back in the patio of Corso. “Every three of four years, I do an internship with the army's medical service. You know, if you get a bullet in the thigh and it hits the femoral artery, you have five minutes to live. You have to open the wound with a knife if it isn't already big enough. You stick your hand in and grab the artery. You can feel it throbbing between your fingers, and you have to put a clip on it to stop it from hemorrhaging. The guy might lose his leg, but not his life.”
Listening to Patrick Chauvel speak is just like reading Les pompes de Ricardo Jésus. Suddenly you feel like a kid reading adventure stories. It's like having the Count of Monte-Cristo and the Three Musketeers dashing through your head.
Except that it smells like blood and shit, the sound of helicopters and rockets is unbearable, and after five Bloody Marys you can dive into the pool at the Hilton before you bleed out in the middle of an intersection. Except that this isn't a novel. These are stories lived by the author. You shudder. You laugh out loud, then quietly, nervously. Every ten pages, you have to put the book down and take a deep breath.
There will be photographers who quibble over the quality of the prints at the exhibition, and journalists who point about some errors in his books, and editors-in-chief shrug their shoulders and grumble: “He's out of control.”
But I urge you to read his books, see his photos, and come to listen when he speaks. He's a man who is entirely free, who sacrificed everything for his passion to live History. That's rare enough to not be missed.
Les Pompes de Ricardo Jésus
Éditions Kero, is Patrick Chauvel’s third book.
Previous work:
Sky (2005, Oh ! Editions)
Rapporteur de Guerre (2003, Oh ! Editions)
Exhibition
For the first time, Patrick Chauvel will exhibit his work at the Musée du Montparnasse, from May 16 to June 3, 2012. A hundred war photographs selected from his forty-year career will be on display.
Musée du Montparnasse
21 Avenue du Maine
75015 Paris
Links
http://editionskero.com/index.php/patrick-chauvel
http://www.museedumontparnasse.net/
http://www.puech.info
Contributors
Michel Puech
