01.06.08 - 15.07.08 Ruth Orkin

17.04.08 - 07.06.08 The New York School

22.02.08 - 05.04.08 Mirella Ricciardi

06.12.07 - 26.01.08 The Bold and the Beautiful

04.10.07 - 01.12.07 Eyes Of An Island - Japanese Photogra...

12.09.07 - 29.09.07 LONDON - Matthew Pillsbury

02.07.07 - 04.08.07 Dr. Harold Edgerton

28.06.07 - 01.08.07 Alfred Eisenstaedt

01.06.07 - 27.06.07 Colin Jones - The Black House

26.04.07 - 17.06.07 Edward Quinn - A Day's Work

03.02.07 - 14.04.07 Fashion

01.02.07 - 10.03.07 Hunter S. Thompson - Gonzo

29.11.06 - 03.01.07 Peter Beard - Time's Up

26.10.06 - 03.11.06 Flip Shulke - Hero

12.10.06 - 14.11.06 David Parker – Sirens II

12.09.06 - 07.10.06 Emil Otto Hoppé - Hoppé's London

23.05.06 - 01.07.06 Botanicals

11.05.06 - 17.06.06 Miroslav Tichy & Jacques Henry Lartigue

01.09.05 - 01.10.05 Ken Griffiths - Three Gorges

23.04.05 - 31.05.05 Sarah Moon - Circus

08.03.05 - 06.04.05 Joseph Szabo - Teenage

24.11.04 - 31.01.05 Peter Beard - Living Sculpture

04.11.04 - 15.01.05 Matthew Pilsbury - Screen Lives

15.09.04 - 30.10.04 David Parker - Sirens

20.11.03 - 17.01.04 Photographs from the Bauhaus


For past exhibitions at Michael Hoppen Contemporary click here

Miroslav Tichy & Jacques Henry Lartigue

11.05.06 - 17.06.06

Chou Valton at the plage de la Garoupe, Cap d’Antibes, July 1932

Chou Valton at the plage de la Garoupe, Cap d’Antibes, July 1932
© Ministčre da la Culture - France / A.A.J.H.L.

Silver Gelatin Print

50 x 60 cm

At first glance, Miroslav Tichý, a down and out from the Czech Republic, and Jacques Henri Lartigue, one of the greatest photographers of the 20th Century, have very little in common. Upon closer inspection there are striking similarities, in both subject matter and approach, in the work of these two artists and their stories are uncannily parallel despite their disparate backgrounds. It is for this reason that The Michael Hoppen Gallery will be holding the very first simultaneous exhibition of the work of Miroslav Tichý and Jacques Henri Lartigue.

Tichý and Lartigue, both self-taught photographers, used the camera to produce aide-mémoires of the seductive world around them. Similarly they trained as classical painters, Lartigue, at the Academie Jullian in 1915 and Tichý, at the Academy of Arts in Prague up until 1948. Their work was produced for personal pleasure and they kept it to themselves, never intending it to be exhibited. This pure motivation, uncorrupted by the desire for fame, explains why neither was recognised until late in life. Lartigue was nearly 70 when his first solo exhibition was held at MoMA, New York in 1963 and Tichý was 79 when his first retrospective was held at the Kunsthaus Zurich in 2005. Most importantly, both artists were completely enchanted by women. With awe and tender loving care they produced their captivating images of everyday muses - ordinary women shopping, sunbathing, sitting on benches or simply strolling around. The greatest link between Tichý and Lartigue is their talent for recognising and capturing laten

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