Brassaï

Brassaï

545 W. 25th Street New York, NY 10001, USA Tuesday, December 1, 2020–Saturday, February 27, 2021

Marlborough New York is pleased to present Brassaï, an exhibition of seminal photographs by the lauded Franco-Hungarian artist that redefined the collective perception of nocturnal Paris and its underground subcultures.

kokoschka dans son jardin (kokoschka in his garden) by brassaï

Brassaï

Kokoschka dans son jardin (Kokoschka in his garden), 1931

Price on Request

deux voyous de la bande du grand albert, quartier italie (members of the big albert gang, place d’italie) by brassaï

Brassaï

Deux voyous de la bande du Grand Albert, quartier Italie (Members of the Big Albert gang, Place d’Italie), 1932

Price on Request

monsieur b. revêtu d’un kimono à brocart d’or (mr. b in a kimono with gold brocade) by brassaï

Brassaï

Monsieur B. revêtu d’un kimono à brocart d’or (Mr. B in a kimono with gold brocade), 1931

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fumeurs preperants les pipes (smokers preparing their pipes) by brassaï

Brassaï

Fumeurs preperants les pipes (Smokers preparing their pipes), 1931

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nature morte, une fumerie d’opium, avenue bosquet, le plateau avec les pipes... (still life, an opium den, avenue bosquet. a tray with pipes, pins, oil lamp.) by brassaï

Brassaï

Nature morte, une fumerie d’opium, avenue Bosquet, le plateau avec les pipes... (Still life, an opium den, Avenue Bosquet. A tray with pipes, pins, oil lamp.), ca. 1931

Price on Request

la toilette dans un hôtel de passe, rue quincampoix (washing up in a brothel, rue quincampoix) by brassaï

Brassaï

La toilette dans un hôtel de passe, rue Quincampoix (Washing up in a brothel, Rue Quincampoix), ca. 1932

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armoire à glace dans un hôtel de passe, rue quincampoix (mirrored wardrobe in a brothel, rue quincampoix) by brassaï

Brassaï

Armoire à glace dans un hôtel de passe, rue Quincampoix (Mirrored wardrobe in a brothel, Rue Quincampoix), 1932

Price on Request

couple fâché au bal des quatre-saisons, rue de lappe, paris (lover’s quarrel, bal des quatre-saisons, rue de lappe, paris) by brassaï

Brassaï

Couple fâché au bal des Quatre-Saisons, rue de Lappe, Paris (Lover’s Quarrel, Bal des Quatre-Saisons, rue de Lappe, Paris), ca. 1932

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le bal des quatre-saisons (bal des quatre-saisons) by brassaï

Brassaï

Le Bal des Quatre-Saisons (Bal des Quatre-Saisons), ca. 1932

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la femme de l'homme gorille, dans sa danse de loïe fuller, place d'italie (the woman of 'the gorilla man', a dance by loïe fuller, place d'italie) by brassaï

Brassaï

La femme de l'homme gorille, dans sa danse de Loïe Fuller, place d'Italie (The woman of 'The Gorilla Man', a dance by Loïe Fuller, Place d'Italie), 1933

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kiki avec son accordéoniste, au cabaret des fleurs, à montparnasse (kiki with her accordion player at the cabaret des fleurs, rue de montparnasse) by brassaï

Brassaï

Kiki avec son accordéoniste, au Cabaret des fleurs, à Montparnasse (Kiki with her accordion player at the Cabaret des Fleurs, Rue de Montparnasse), ca. 1932

Price on Request

l'élection du plus beau modèle, au bal de la horde (the election of the most beautiful model, bal de la horde) by brassaï

Brassaï

L'élection du plus beau modèle, au bal de La Horde (The election of the most beautiful model, Bal de La Horde), ca. 1932

Price on Request

The Directors of Marlborough New York are pleased to present Brassaï, an exhibition of seminal photographs by the lauded Franco-Hungarian artist that redefined the collective perception of nocturnal Paris and its underground subcultures during the 1930s. The exhibition will open on Tuesday, December 1, 2020. Comprised of 39 photographs printed by the artist, the exhibition culls some of his most iconic images from the series Paris by NightSecret ParisParis by Day, and The Artists of My Life.

Brassaï (1899-1984) primarily favored living la vie de noctambule (the life of a nightwalker) during the years in which he was capturing scenes around Paris for his photographic series: climbing towers and balconies, surveying quiet parks through locked fences, and walking the Seine, the railroad tracks and the boulevards. In 1976, he explained, “I was eager to penetrate this other world, this fringe world, the secret, sinister world of mobsters, outcasts, toughs, pimps, whores, addicts, inverts. Rightly or wrongly, I felt at the time that this underground world represented Paris at its least cosmopolitan, at its most alive, its most authentic.”

Brassaï never exposed more than two or three negatives of a subject. Such quick decisions demonstrate his prowess for capturing fleeting moments, a skill which certainly served him well in the crowded cafes and dancehalls as well as in dark alleys where lingering was unwise.

The selection of images from Brassaï’s nighttime series form a sort of visual time capsule depicting the many facets of what the colorful Parisian nightlife of the 1930s had to offer. Reminiscing in later years, Brassaï recalled that he and the poet Jacques Prevért “reveled in the beauty of” what they believed to be, at the time, “sinister things.” Appearances by notorious figures of the queer scene of Montparnasse like Fat Claude and Madame Bijou serve as formidable foils to the portraits of lionized male artists—Braque, Maillol, Miró, and Picasso, which are also on view. The exhibition articulates the artist’s egalitarian eye, the same dignity afforded to the master artist shown in his prime is given to the so-called “doyen” of the Parisian vagabonds.

This will be the first time in nearly forty years that Marlborough will showcase Brassaï’s photography. Anne Wilkes Tucker, author of Brassaï: The Eye of Paris (Museum of Fine Arts Houston, 1999), has contributed a new essay for a fully illustrated publication that will accompany the exhibition.