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Like Mozart in music, or Reshevsky in chess,
Lartigue was a prodigy, and while still very young he photographed the lives of
his rich and privileged friends and family in the early 20th century.
It seems that even as a child he somehow had
the aesthetic judgement and knowledge of photographic tricks and techniques
that most of us have to struggle to acquire ... through hard study, and much
trial and error.
This shot, typical of his style, was taken in
the Avenue du Boie de Boulogne in Paris, in 1911 when he was still only
seventeen.
He
trained as a painter in Paris, and in adult life became a well known artist.
His photography became widely known only in the 1960s, but it is now obvious
that it was as a photographer that he was outstandingly gifted.
He tried to extend into adulthood the
carefree, playful, eccentric world of his childhood. He was always happy to
photograph people at play, or with their animals, and to document technological
advances such as powered flight and the rise of the motor car, but though he
lived through both the World Wars of the 20th century he seems to have gone out
of his way not to record them.
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