Tête à Tête: Portraits by Henri Cartier-Bresson 
Thames & Hudson | 1998 | ISBN 0821225626 | 144 pages | djvu | 10 MB

Henri Cartier-Bresson's Tête à Tête contains the photographer's portraits of 
some of the most potent icons of the latter half of the 20th century. The book 
is understated, yet powerful and challenging--a masterpiece of the 
photographer's art of composition and expression. Presented in nonchronological 
order, yet arranged to provide links and parallels in posture and facial 
likenesses, familiar icons easily mix with anonymous subjects: a very young 
Truman Capote in crumpled T-shirt, on the brink of literary fame; a very old 
Colette, who retains her inquisitorial gaze; Matisse with his birds; Sartre 
with his pipe; Igor Stravinsky, astonishingly similar in 1946 and 1967; a 
beaming Che Guevara. There are also group portraits of unknowns, but none the 
less resonant for that: besuited men in 1950s Iran, tribespeople from Kashmir, 
prostitutes in Mexico, the women of southern Spain, dressed eternally in black. 
As the art historian E.H. Gombrich comments in his introduction to Tête à Tête, 
in these portraits Cartier-Bresson moved significantly away from the received 
techniques of the "society" photographer. Instead, he "always preferred to lie 
in wait for the telling moment. 

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[Photography doesn't begin with the camera; it begins with how we see all the 
time]

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