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  • Le Quebec as seen by Cartier-Bresson

Le Quebec as seen by Cartier-Bresson


Poster image Le Quebec as seen by Cartier-Bresson

The photographs of Henri Cartier-Bresson were the first ever to be displayed in the Louvre, Paris. In this film the world-famous photographer turns his lens on the Québec scene, finding there the same fascination with form and movement that gives his work a mark of individuality.



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Director

Wolf Koenig

Actor

Frédéric Savard

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While Cartier-Bresson's work enjoys undeniable international renown, his time in Quebec, and the resulting film, remain strangely unknown to this day. It was at the invitation of the NFB that the great photographer visited the Belle Province to observe the changes experienced by this distinct society in the throes of modernisation and on the eve of the Quiet Revolution. Cartier-Bresson began by documenting Quebec's terroir, but it was his shots of Montreal and its militant youth that gave this photo essay its distinctive character, and its importance as a historical archive document. Rarely broadcast, the film was only made available online very recently, and it richly deserves to be rediscovered.

 

Frédéric Savard
Archivist and programmer

 

 

 

 

 


  • Français

    Français

    10 mn

    Language: Français
  • English

    English

    10 mn

    Language: English
  • Année 1969
  • Pays Canada, Quebec
  • Durée 10
  • Producteur ONF / NFB
  • Langue English, French
  • Résumé court The world-famous photographer turns his lens on the Québec scene, finding there the same fascination with form and movement that gives his work a mark of individuality.

While Cartier-Bresson's work enjoys undeniable international renown, his time in Quebec, and the resulting film, remain strangely unknown to this day. It was at the invitation of the NFB that the great photographer visited the Belle Province to observe the changes experienced by this distinct society in the throes of modernisation and on the eve of the Quiet Revolution. Cartier-Bresson began by documenting Quebec's terroir, but it was his shots of Montreal and its militant youth that gave this photo essay its distinctive character, and its importance as a historical archive document. Rarely broadcast, the film was only made available online very recently, and it richly deserves to be rediscovered.

 

Frédéric Savard
Archivist and programmer

 

 

 

 

 


  • Français

    Français


    Duration: 10 minutes
    Language: Français
    10 mn
  • English

    English


    Duration: 10 minutes
    Language: English
    10 mn
  • Année 1969
  • Pays Canada, Quebec
  • Durée 10
  • Producteur ONF / NFB
  • Langue English, French
  • Résumé court The world-famous photographer turns his lens on the Québec scene, finding there the same fascination with form and movement that gives his work a mark of individuality.

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