Nico Jesse’s 1954 photo-book Vrouwen van Parijs (‘Women of Paris’) gives a light-hearted and romantic view of the city. Jesse – a family doctor as well as a passionate photographer – photographed no fewer than 2000 women in the space of ten days. His portraits of actresses, students, mannequins and female vagrants offered a fascinating glimpse behind the scenes of Paris and introduced the Dutch public to the ‘Parisienne’ in all her different facets. In his 1956 photo novel Een liefdesgeschiedenis in Saint Germain de Prés (also published as Love on the Left Bank), Ed van der Elsken offered a rather different view of the city. He had been living in Paris for a number of years and therefore had more opportunity to photograph real street life. He hung around with a group of existentialist young people whom he photographed regularly. They became the main characters in his (fictive) love story, which portrayed a rougher and tougher side of Parisian life (in particular that of the bohemian artists in and around the Quartier Latin). Gare du Nord showcases work by around fifty Dutch photographers. Exhibits will include images not only of anonymous street life, but also of celebrities like Orson Welles, Juliette Gréco, Christian Dior and the still extremely young Brigitte Bardot and Yves Saint Laurent. In addition, there will be a chance to see two short experimental films: Joris Ivens’ 1927 film Études des mouvements à Paris (Studies of Movements in Paris) and De Hallen van Parijs (also known as Les Halles de Paris) made by Paul Schuitema in 1939. The latter was digitized last year by Eye Film Institute Netherlands and is now for the first time available to the general public.
The exhibition will be accompanied by a Dutch-language publication, Gare du Nord. Nederlandse fotografen in Parijs 1900-1968, containing essays by Wim van Sinderen and Willemijn van der Zwaan; graphic design by SYB (published by Ludion, price € 24.90).