Jeu de Paume

Lucien Hervé

18 Nov 2017 - 27 Mar 2018

Lucien Hervé
Observatoire, Delhi, Inde 1955
© Lucien Hervé, Paris
Lucien Hervé
Observatoire, Jaïpur, Inde 1955
© Lucien Hervé, Paris
Lucien Hervé
Cathédrale, Brasilia, Brésil (architecte : Oscar Niemeyer) 1961
© Lucien Hervé, Paris
Lucien Hervé
Chantier naval, Barcelone, Espagne 1959
© Lucien Hervé, Paris
Lucien Hervé
Tour Eiffel, Paris, France 1944
© Lucien Hervé, Paris
Lucien Hervé
UNESCO, Paris, France (architectes : Marcel Breuer, Pier Luigi Nervi, Bernard Zehrfuss) 1955
© Lucien Hervé, Paris
Lucien Hervé
L’Escurial, Espagne 1959
© Lucien Hervé, Paris
Lucien Hervé
Parthénon, Athènes, Grèce 1961
© Lucien Hervé, Paris
LUCIEN HERVÉ
Geometry of light
18 November 2017 – 27 May 2018

Curator: Imola Gebauer

If he collaborated with some of the other great architects of the twentieth century, the photographer Lucien Hervé (1910-2007) is above all famous for his work with Le Corbusier. A great constructor of the image, a single detail was all he needed to depict the ensemble, and he was capable of expressing the space simply by means of the contrast between light and shadow.

Lucien Hervé was also a committed observer of the world and of humanity however, seeking everywhere ‘the presence of the living’. His photographs taken from above or at an angle allowed him to play with the geometry of the image, and tended towards abstraction.

This exhibition at the Château de Tours pays tribute to him by juxtaposing, as he did, ‘the universal and the timeless’, the ancient and the modern, the abstract and the human.

A contemporary of some of the great Hungarian photographers—André Kertész and Brassaï—, as well as Robert Capa and Nicolás Muller —both of whom were recently exhibited at the Château de Tours— part of Lucien Hervé’s work remains unknown to the wider public. Despite his passion for architecture, this was never his sole subject or exclusive focus, Lucien Hervé also sought to represent in his work humanity and traces of humanity on the world, all the while avoiding the anecdotal.

For example, he photographed living and working conditions in places like France, India and South America. He captured children and old men who moved him, as well as the human gestures or movements that allowed him to play with the geometry of the image. His quest for beauty, whether through architecture or humanity, often culminated in the abstraction of his subjects.
 

Tags: Brassaï, Robert Capa, Le Corbusier, André Kertész