Through the years, Cartier-Bresson's
famous post-war portrait of a vigner-
on at home in the Loire Valley has ac-
cumulated, for anyone who's revisited
it over time, a gathering context of
associations, relevant and extraneous
in equal parts, so that it is pleas-
ing to try to see it as for the first
time, although at one's present age,
and in one's present culture and soci-
ety. One of the first things to strike
one is the angle of view, higher than
if one were at the table and lower than at the mantle; but this is not a Rollei photograph, which could account for an abdominal perspective. This is a Leica image, from the nose. The vis-itor bowed.
Nothing in this
space is a clat-
ter. Everything
thuds; which is
to say, illumin-
ation weighs ev-
erything in aud-
ible coherency.
It's a declara-
tion of genius,
yet whose, I'm
not sure.
Henri Cartier-Bresson
Le Baron, Chouzy-sur-Cissé
1945
Martin Conte
work shirt
2014