Showing posts with label René Burri. Show all posts
Showing posts with label René Burri. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 10, 2019

René Burri in pictures

René Burri – in pictures

Swiss photographer René Burri has died at the age of 81. Burri became an associate of Magnum in 1955 and travelled almost incessantly for the next two decades, working on commissions for the New York Times, Vogue, Paris-Match, Time, and Der Stern
Mon 20 Oct 2014  

RENÉ BURRI (1933-2014, CH)

René Burri studied at the School of Applied Arts in his native city of Zurich, Switzerland. From 1953 to 1955 he worked as a documentary film-maker and began to use a Leica while doing his military service.

Burri became an associate of Magnum in 1955 and received international attention for one of his first reportages, on deaf-mute children, «Touch of Music for the Deaf», published in Life magazine.

In 1956 he traveled throughout Europe and the Middle East, and then went to Latin America, where he made a series on the gauchos that was published by Du magazine in 1959. It was also for this Swiss periodical that he photographed artists such as Picasso, Giacometti and Le Corbusier. He became a full member of Magnum in 1959, and started work on his book «Die Deutschen», published in Switzerland in 1962, and by Robert Delpire the following year with the title Les Allemands. In 1963, while working in Cuba, he photographed Ernesto ‚Che‘ Guevara during an interview by an American journalist. His images of the famous revolutionary with his cigar appeared around the world. Burri participated in the creation of Magnum Films in 1965, and afterwards spent six months in China, where he made the film The Two Faces of China produced by the BBC. He opened the Magnum Gallery in Paris in 1962, while continuing his activities as a photographer; at the same time he made  collages and drawings.

In 1998 Burri won the Dr Erich Salomon Prize from the German Association of Photography. A big retrospective of his work was held in 2004-2005 at the Maison Européenne de la Photographie in Paris and toured many other European museums. René Burri lives and works in Zurich and Paris. René Burri passed away at the age of 81 on October, 2014.

In 2013 René Burri has founded his own foundation that comprises the entity of his oeuvre and is archived by the Musée d’Elyseée in Lausanne.


René Burri, Maarad Street. Beirut, Lebanon, 1991


René Burri, Tiananmen Square, Beijing, China, 1989

René Burri, Sao Paulo, Brazil, 1960


René Burri, Los Angeles, California, USA, 1984

René Burri,Le Corbusier and his "Modulor" in his office, 35 rue de Sèvres.
Paris, France, 1959

Ernesto (Che) Guevara, during an exclusive interview in his office in Havana, Cuba in 1963. 

The Ching Chung Hwa family having lunch under Mao Zedong’s portrait at the People’s commune of Ma Cheo, China, 1964.

René Burri, A worker from Nordeste shows his family the new city on inauguration day.
In the background: the National Congress building by Oscar Niemeyer. Brasilia, Brazil, 1960

Pablo Picasso at his home, the Villa La Californie in Cannes, 1957. Burri first met Picasso when he was 24.

René Burri, Ministry of Health, planned by architect Oscar Niemeyer. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 1960

Zurich, Switzerland, 1980.




Monday, October 20, 2014

Magnum photographer René Burri dies



René Burri in 2004, in front of his most famous photograph of the revolationary Che Guevara, which he took in Havana in 1961. Photograph: Sandro Campardo/AP


Magnum photographer René Burri dies

Swiss photographer best known for iconic portraits of Che Guevara and Picasso dies aged 81 after a long illness 

AFP in Geneva
Monday 20 October 2014

The Swiss photographer René Burri, celebrated for his portraits of Che Guevara and Pablo Picasso, died on Monday in Zurich aged 81, the Magnum Photo agency said.
Burri, who lived between Zurich and Paris, had been suffering from a long illness, Magnum said.
Martin Parr, president of Magnum Photos, said: “Not only was he one of the great postwar photographers, he was also one of the most generous people I have had the privilege to meet.”
Burri started working for Magnum in 1956 and covered major political events around the world.
Among his most famous works were an iconic portrait of the revolutionary Che Guevara smoking a cigar, as well as portraits of Fidel Castro and hundreds of pictures of the architect Le Corbusier, and the artists Alberto Giacometti, Yves Klein and Picasso.
He later said that Guevara was “an arrogant man, but he had charm ... He was like a tiger in a cage.”
Of photographing celebrities, Burri said: “You must not come at it like a bulldozer.”
His friends said he took four years to organise a meeting with Picasso.
After studying at the Arts and Crafts school of Zurich, Burri worked as an assistant cameraman for Walt Disney films in Switzerland before joining Magnum.
His first picture, which he took in 1946 when he was 13, was a shot of Winston Churchill driving through Zurich in an open-topped car.
He left his archives of some 30,000 pictures to the Musée de l’Élysee in Lausanne.