Robert Doisneau (b Gentilly, Val-de-Marne, 14 April 1912; d Paris, 1 April
1994).
French photographer. He attended the Ecole Estienne in Paris (1926–9), where
he studied engraving, and after leaving the school he had various jobs
designing engraved labels and other items. He found his training of little
use, however, and soon began to experiment with photography, teaching
himself the techniques. In 1931 he worked as an assistant to the
photographer Andre Vigneau. The following year Doisneau’s series of
photographs of a flea market in Paris was published in the periodical
Excelsior. His early photographs have many of the features of his mature
works: for example the seeming unawareness of the camera shown by the people
in Sunday Painter (1932; ) and the comic subject both add to the
photograph’s charm, a quality Doisneau valued greatly. In 1934 he obtained a
job as an industrial photographer at the Renault factory in Billancourt,
Paris, where he was required to take photographs of the factory interior and
its machines as well as advertising shots of the finished cars. In the
summer of 1939 he was dismissed for being repeatedly late and then worked
briefly for the Rapho photographic agency in Paris, producing more
photographs of the capital.
Three Children in the Park, 1971
The Bouquet of Daffodils
1950
The
Fallen Horse Paris,
1942
Bistro at Arcueil
1945
Sunday morning in Arcueil
1945
Down to
the Factory
1946
Down to the Factory
1946
Sidelong glance
1948
Kiss by the Hotel de Ville
1950
L'Accordeoniste, rue Mouffetard
Paris, 1951
Square du Vert-Galant
1950
The Fortune Teller
1951
Hell
1952
Coco
Paris, 1952
Picasso and the loaves
1952
By the railings
around the Luxembourg Gardens
1953
Georges Braque a Varengeville
Normandy, 1953
Wanda wiggles her hips
1953
Pipi Pigeon
Musician in the Rain
Fox terrier on the Pont des Arts
1953
Angels and Leeks
1953
Cesar Baldaccini
(The Sculptor Cesar in his Workshop)
Paris, 1955
The Cellist
1957
School Kids
Information Scolaire
1956
Barbarian prisoner and Callipygian Venus, Versailles
1966
Untitled
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