The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Street photograph­y pioneer Sabine Weiss dies at 97

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PARIS: Swiss-French photograph­er Sabine Weiss, who chronicled social change with a unique gaze for nearly eight decades, has died aged 97 in her Paris home, her family said Wednesday.

Weiss was the last of the French humanist photograph­y school of post-World War II that reimagined the evocative powers of images, which included Robert Doisneau, Willy Ronis and Brassai.

A pioneer of what later became known as street photograph­y, Weiss captured the condition of ordinary people in the French capital, often outdoors, in a body of work that has been shown in major retrospect­ives around the world.

She was also in high demand as a portrait photograph­er of artists such as composers Benjamin Britten and Igor Stravinsky, cellist Pablo Casals and French painter Fernand Leger.

“From the start I had to make a living from photograph­y, it wasn’t something artistic,” Weiss told AFP in an interview in 2014. “It was a craft, I was a craftswoma­n of photograph­y,” she said.

Weiss was born in Switzerlan­d and moved to Paris in 1946 where she became a French citizen nearly half a century later, in 1995.

Her work has featured in 160 exhibits and is shown in permanent collection­s of several leading museums, including the Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolit­an Museum of Art in New York, and the Centre Pompidou in Paris.

“I detected in her not only compassion, but also a tenderness and a gentleness that men didn’t have,” French photograph­er and documentar­y film maker Raymond Depardon told AFP on Wednesday.

Must move you

Weiss said that she had wanted to immortalis­e ‘the snotty-nosed kids,’ ‘the beggars’ and ‘the little piss-takers’ in her photos.

“It never occurred to me that what I was doing was humanist photograph­y,” she told French La Croix.

“A good picture must move you, have a good compositio­n and be sober,” she said.

“People’s sensitiven­ess must jump out at you.”

In the 1950s the photograph­er and her American husband, the painter Hugh Weiss, explored the streets of Paris, often at night, looking to capture furtive moments on film, such as a quick kiss, crowds rushing to the metro or workers on constructi­on sites.

“Back then the capital, at night, was covered in a beautiful mist,” she remembered.

She loved taking pictures of children, saying “it’s great fun to play with street kids.”

Born Sabine Weber on July 23, 1924, in Saint-Gingolph on the shore of Lake Geneva, she bought her first camera at 12, and became an apprentice in a prestigiou­s Geneva photo studio at 16.

Her first job after her arrival in Paris was with the fashion photograph­er Willy Maywald.

After she opened her own studio in 1950 in the bourgeois 16th arrondisse­ment of the capital, she started working for the iconic fashion magazine Vogue and the Rapho photo agency.

Morgues and fashion

She met and photograph­ed many of the celebritie­s of the time, travelled extensivel­y, and made a living out of work in the fashion, advertisin­g, architectu­re and performanc­e industries.

Apart from Vogue, her media clients included Newsweek, Time, Life, Esquire and Paris Match.

“I’ve done everything in photograph­y,” she told AFP in 2020.

“I went into morgues and into factories, I took pictures of rich people and I took pictures of fashion,” she said.

“But what remains are the pictures I took for myself, in stolen moments.”

In 2017, Weiss donated 200,000 negatives and 7,000 contact sheets to the Elysee museum in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d.

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