Dominique Darbois
Dominique Darbois (5 April 1925 – 6 September 2014) was a French photojournalist and author, noted for her studies of exotic locales, artifacts, children, and primitive peoples. She was born in Paris on 5 April 1925, and lives there today. During the Second World War was active in the Free French Forces. She was imprisoned for two years in the Cité de Muette housing estate in Drancy near Paris,[1] which had become an internment camp. On liberation in 1944 received the Croix de Guerre for her work with the French Resistance.[2]
In 1946 she began photographing professionally, beginning with journalistic work in Cambodia. From 1949 to the present, she has photographed throughout the world, including Laos, Indonesia, USSR, Australia, Mexico, Guatemala, Algeria, Iran, and the Congo. In 1952, she received the “Prix Exploration” from the President of the French Republic.[3]
In the course of her many voyages, Darbois has often declared herself annoyed with "le colonialisme européen," and has involved herself with "anti-colonialist struggles" in Indochina, Algeria, and Cuba.[4] During the Algerian period, she involved herself with the Jeanson network (Réseau Jeanson).[5]
From 1952 through 1978, she completed 20 books for the collection Les Enfants du Monde [Children of the World], with the publishing group Fernand Nathan in Paris. These books are typically oversize quarto volumes featuring candid black-and-white photographs of children of various races and nationalities, often naked or scantily attired. Titles include "Agossou, le petit Africain" ("Agossou, the little African", published in English as "Agossou, a Boy of Africa" and "Agossou: His Life in Africa");[6] "Parana, le petit Indien", "Faouzi: Boy of Egypt," "Natacha, Girl of Russia," and "Nick in Tahiti." Beyond the juvenile market, she has published books about Amazon Indians, African sculpture, Chinese landscape painting, Egyptian art, and Oriental carpets. In the late 1960s she did a number of publications of her work on Afghanistan art, including L’Afghanistan et son art (Editions Cercle d’Art, Paris, 1968), and Afghanistan und Seine Kunst (Artia Press, Prague, 1968).
Darbois had her first solo exhibition during 1951 in Paris. Since 1984, she has had numerous exhibitions of her African photography and her work on women of different cultures. In the late 1990s, she did a major exhibition on women called Regards de Femmes.[7]
Darbois died on 6 September 2014 at the age of 89.[8]
References
- ↑ http://www.actuphoto.com/photographes/biographies/dominique-darbois-940.html
- ↑ Darbois, Terre d'enfants, 2004
- ↑ FotoFest Archive
- ↑ http://www.jeuneafrique.com/Article/LIN26015lesjotnervi0/les-journalistes-se-livrent.-Actualite_Info.html
- ↑ ↑ Mémoires de la guerre d'Algérie Par Martin Evens ; Page 74
- ↑ http://www.abebooks.co.uk/search/sortby/3/an/Darbois+/tn/+Agossou
- ↑ FotoFest Archive
- ↑ "Décès de la photographe Dominique Darbois". rfi.fr. 8 September 2014.
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