Martine
Franck (April 2, 1938 – August 16, 2012) was a well-known Belgian
documentary and portrait photographer, and the second wife of Henri
Cartier-Bresson. A member of Magnum Photos for over 32 years, Franck
was also co-founder and president of the Henri Cartier-Bresson
Foundation.
Early life
Franck
was born in Antwerp to a Belgian banker and his British wife, and
after her birth the family moved almost immediately to London. A year
later, her father joined the British army, and the rest of the family
was evacuated to the United States, spending the remainder of the
Second World War in Long Island and Arizona.
Franck's
father was an amateur art collector who often took his daughter to
visit galleries and museums. Franck was in boarding school from the
age of six onwards, and her mother sent her a postcard every day,
frequently of paintings. Franck said that in high school she loved
art history, and planned to become a curator.
Personal life
Franck
was often described as elegant, dignified and shy.
In
1966, Franck met Henri Cartier-Bresson, thirty years her senior, when
she was photographing Paris fashion shows for the New York Times. In
2010, she told interviewer Charlie Rose "his opening line was,
‘Martine, I want to come and see your contact sheets.’” They
married in 1970, had one child, a daughter named Mélanie, and
remained together until his death in 2004.
Franck
was diagnosed with leukemia in 2010, and died in Paris in 2012.
Career
Franck
studied art history at the University of Madrid and at the Ecole du
Louvre in Paris. After struggling through her thesis (on French
sculptor Henri Gaudier-Brzeska and the influence of cubism on
sculpture), she said she realized she had no particular talent for
writing, and turned to photography instead.
In
1963, Franck became an assistant to photographers Eliot Elisofon and
Gjon Mili at Time-Life in Paris. By 1996 she was a busy freelance
photographer for magazines such as Vogue, Life and Sports
Illustrated, and the official photographer of the Théâtre du Soleil
(a position she held for 48 years). From 1970 to 1971 she worked in
Paris at the photo agency Vu, and in 1972 she co-founded the photo
agency Viva.
In
1980, Franck joined the famous Magnum cooperative photo agency as a
"nominee", and in 1983 she became a full member. She was
one of a very small number of women to be accepted into the agency.
In 1983, she completed a project for the now-defunct French Ministry
of Women's Rights and in 1985 she began collaborating with the
non-profit International Federation of Little Brothers of the Poor.
In 1993, she first traveled to the Irish island of Tory where she
documented the tiny Gaelic community living there. She has also
traveled to Tibet and Nepal, and with the help of Marilyn Silverstone
photographed the education system of the Tibetan Tulkus monks. In
2003 and 2004 she returned to Paris to document the work of theater
director Robert Wilson who was staging La Fontaine's fables at the
Comédie Française.
Nine
books of Franck's photographs have been published, and in 2005 Franck
was made a chevalier of the French Légion d'Honneur.
Throughout
her career Franck, who was sometimes described as a feminist, was
uncomfortable being in the shadow of her famous husband and wanted to
be recognized for her own work. In 1970, the Institute of
Contemporary Arts in London planned to stage Franck's first solo
exhibition: when she saw that the invitations included her husband's
name and said he would be present at the launch, she cancelled the
show. Franck once said that she put her husband's career ahead of her
own. In 2003 Franck and her daughter launched the Henri
Cartier-Bresson Foundation to promote Cartier-Bresson's
photojournalism, and in 2004 Franck became its president.
Work
Franck
was well known for her documentary-style photographs of important
cultural figures such as painter Marc Chagall, philosopher Michel
Foucault and poet Seamus Heaney, and of remote or marginalized
communities such as Tibetan Buddhist monks, elderly French people,
and isolated Gaelic speakers. She cited as influences the portraits
of British photographer Julia Margaret Cameron and the work of
American photojournalist Dorothea Lange and American documentary
photographer Margaret Bourke-White. In 2010, she told the Times that
photography "suits my curiosity about people and human
situations."
She
worked outside the studio, using a 35-millimeter Leica camera, and
preferring black-and-white film. The British Royal Photographic
Society has described her work as "firmly rooted in the
tradition of French humanist documentary photography."
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