Janine
Niépce (February 12, 1921 – August 5, 2007) was a French
photographer. A cousin of Nicéphore Niépce, the pioneer of
photography, she was born into a family of winemakers in Burgundy.
In
1944, Janine Niepce graduated a license for the history of art and of
archeology at the Sorbonne. At the same time, she developed films for
the French Resistance and took part in the liberation of Paris as a
liaison officer. Niepce was one of the first photo-journalists in
France. Beginning in 1946 she traveled extensively in France,
recording changes in French culture (including the first television
in 1963, and the rise of rapid transport) and the contrast between
life in the countryside, in the towns, and in the capital, Paris.
Then from 1963 she began reporting from further afield in Europe and
around the world, including Japan, Cambodia, India, USA, Canada.
In
the 1970s, her work focused particularly on the women's liberation
movement and its struggles for freedom of contraception, abortion and
wage equality.
She
was named Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres in 1981.
From
1984 to 1986, she reported on researchers and technicians for the
French Ministry of Research.
She
became a Knight of the Legion d'Honor in 1985.
Since
1955, Janine Niepce worked with Rapho agency which published her
photographs in the French press and internationally.
Her
site : http://janine-niepce.com/
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