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The Lartigue Hoax?
A new book offers a controversial take on the
famous photographer.
By Jim Lewis
Posted Wednesday, Sept. 15, 2004, at 3:54 AM PT 


Jacques Henri Lartigue was granted a childhood of
great privilege: On this, and it seems on this
alone, everyone can agree. He was born in a
Parisian suburb in 1894, his father was an
enormously wealthy banker, and in keeping with
the conventions of the belle �poque, Lartigue was
expected to do nothing of consequence but live
his life elegantly and honorably.
Amusements, sports, travel, fashion: These were
the diversions suitable to his day and station,
and Lartigue took to them enthusiastically, and
in particular to the then-new hobby of 
"instantaneous" photography�that is, pictures
taken with cameras quick enough to freeze motion
and stop time, to show, say, divers in midair. 

Lartigue began taking photographs at a very young
age�6, according to some accounts, 8 according to
others. By the time he was in his teens he was
selling them to popular French photo-journals. He
took pictures of the kinds of things boys like to
see pictured: cars, airplanes, athletes, and so
on. But he also took more private pictures of his
family, his dogs, and some candid shots of
fashionable ladies promenading in their finery.
He liked the glamour, he enjoyed the scene; he
took pictures of everything he wanted to
remember, a photographic diary that he arranged
into enormous scrapbooks. 

Cut forward a half-century or so�and this is
where the story becomes so improbable that it
starts to seem like a fiction. In 1962, when
Lartigue was in his late 60s, he visited America
for the first time. In New York he stopped by the
offices of a photo rep to see if he could hawk a
few of his vintage prints; the rep,
sensing something extraordinary, called John
Szarkowski at MoMA's department of photography,
who jumped at the chance to show Lartigue's work.
The exhibition was the following year, and with
it Lartigue achieved late-life fame as one of the
first masters of the medium, an unschooled
amateur who achieved genius entirely by naive
instinct. 

It's a great tale, and Lartigue's renown endures
in part because of it. Last year, Abrams printed
a deluxe 400-page volume of Lartigue's work,
which joined a half-dozen or so studies and
portfolios already in print; an exhibition just
closed at the Hayward Gallery in London. And here
comes a Harvard scholar named Kevin Moore with a
book called Jacques Henri Lartigue: The Invention
of an Artist, which claims that the story was
little better than a canard, perpetrated by
Lartigue and seized upon by Szarkowski in a
determined effort to rewrite the history of
photography. 

In fact, Moore argues, Lartigue was well-versed
in the conventions of turn-of-the-century picture
making. His father was a camera buff, and the son
was given every possible advantage: the newest
equipment, lots of leisure time, and a thorough
education in the ways of the medium. Moreover, it
was an era when amateur photography was all the
rage, when magazines and books were full of
instruction, debate, and example. 

Still, Lartigue presented his work as the
innocent expression of a wonderstruck boy
amateur, and MoMA was happy to promote it as
such. It was just the sort of thing they were
looking for. Szarkowski, a curator of unequalled
influence, was trying to establish a new style of
photography, based on an aesthetic of
spontaneity, contingency, intimacy, and
autobiography.
Robert Frank was the progenitor of this kind of
work, and Garry Winogrand was the heir apparent,
but the  style needed roots in the origins of the
medium if it was really going to stick. It had to
be presented in a way that made it seem both
completely unexpected and entirely inevitable;
that's what museums do, and
Szarkowski was unusually good at it. Lartigue was
the photographic equivalent of the missing link,
the bridge that connected prehistory to our
modern selves.


Unless, as Moore argues, he was the photographic
equivalent of Piltdown Man: a hoax foisted upon a
credulous public. Szarkowski presented Lartigue
as childlike and intuitive; Moore describes him
as "probing, observant, sophisticated, and
mocking � out to prove his insider knowledge�to
show that he knew what was in fashion, that he
noticed how people scrutinized each other, that
he understood the humor of personal vanity."
Which one is right, and why does it matter?
Neither is quite accurate; both are exaggerating;
and it matters because the answer
reveals some unexpected truths about the nature
of photography. 

In most arts the label "amateur" would be
dismissive at best, but in photography, which was
born not knowing whether it was art, science, or
commerce, amateurism suggests both
lightheartedness and purity of intent, and it's
this aestheticism which is at stake in
Szarkowski's insistence that Lartigue was an
amateur. An amateur painter is not skilled enough
to make a living at it; an amateur photographer
is not crass enough to try. Lartigue sold a few
pictures here and there, but making a living was
not his concern. He was both too rich and too
young to care about such things.           Score
one for Szarkowski. 

Still, we should be clear about one thing: In an
important sense there are no naifs in the arts.
It simply doesn't happen. There are disturbed
people, like Henry Darger or the practitioners of
art brut; there are shut-ins like Joseph Cornell;
rustics like the Rev. Howard Finster; eccentrics
like the Douanier Rousseau; and plenty of artists
who, for one reason or
another, simply choose not to participate in the
art world as we understand it. But no one has
attained adulthood, still less made pictures, in
anything like a state of visual innocence. The
world of images is too much with us; if you know
what a picture is at all, you know most of its
conventions. And if you're an impassioned student
like Lartigue, you probably know almost all of
them. Score one for Moore.  

It is, I think, the last point Moore earns.
Lartigue was 11 when he shot the earliest of the
pictures in the MoMA show, and most were taken
before he was 18. There's a limit to how
sophisticated he could have been at that age, and
Moore's efforts to recast him as a canny
professional run aground on the shallows of
Lartigue's incontrovertible youth. Certainly
Lartigue was curious and quick: He absorbed
conventions effortlessly, and he knew how to see
the world through a viewfinder. But we ought to 
believe him when he says that he was motivated by
nothing more than wonder and delight, and it is
this that makes his work so appealing. (He may be
the only 20th-century artist to be famous for his
happiness.) There is no guileless eye, but there
are guileless boys, and Lartigue was
one: a prodigy. 

Now, there are some arts where prodigies are
relatively common, and others where they're
almost unheard of. There are plenty of brilliant
children in show business, for example�musicians,
composers, dancers, actors�but there are none
that I can think of in painting or sculpture, and
very, very few in literature. Photography, oddly
enough, seems to belong
in the former category; on this level, anyway,
it's closer to music than it is to painting.
Certainly, Lartigue qualifies as a prodigy, and
so does a video-maker named Sadie Benning, who
made some extraordinary tapes when she was 16.
Cindy Sherman was 23 when she began her Film
Stills series�not a child, to be sure, but far
younger than any modern painter who's produced a
comparable body of work. Even Picasso didn't
really start producing Picassos until he was in
his mid-20s. 

Taking pictures is, in many ways, a kind of
performance, and a camera is more like a musical
instrument than a paintbrush or a pen. So,
looking at a Lartigue print is very much like
beholding, say, one of those brilliant child soul
singers who come along every so often. You know
they can't possibly have the wisdom that their
work suggests, but it doesn't seem to matter. The
miracle of such artists isn't a
question of intuitive technique, for as I say,
that's a contradiction in terms. But neither is
it simply an illusion. It's something altogether
astonishing and inexplicable, an expertise beyond
experience, and sometimes all you can do is stand
back and admire it. 


Jim Lewis is the author of three novels, most
recently, The King Is Dead. 

Photographs of Paris, June, 1911; The Zissou 24,
1910; Biarritz, 1910 all by Jacques Henri
Lartigue courtesy of Association des Amis de
Jacques-Henri Lartigue, Paris. Photographie J. H.
Lartigue � Minist�re de la Culture�France/AAJHL.
All rights reserved.

http://slate.msn.com/id/2106598/fr/ifr/



                
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