Double exposure: new Paris venue to unveil two historic photography collections

Arts

Solita Solano and Djuna Barnes photographed in Paris in 1925 by Maurice-Louis Branger © Maurice-Louis Branger / Roger-Viollet

A new exhibition venue unlocking two French collections of historical photography is to open later this year on the Left Bank in Paris. After a public call for tenders last year, the City of Paris has awarded the photographic agency NDLR/Groupe Photononstop a five-year renewable contract to show and sell digital reproductions of images from the defunct agency Roger-Viollet and France-Soir, a former daily newspaper that now exists online.

The venue will open in the former Saint-Germain-des-Prés premises of Roger-Viollet, which produced analogue prints by dozens of photographers, including Eugène Atgets street scenes of late 19th-century Paris that inspired the Surrealists. One widely published photograph by the Neurdein brothers captures the 1900 Exposition Universelle in Paris, with the Eiffel Tower across the river Seine.

The former Roger-Viollet photography agency in the Saint-Germain-des-Prés district of Paris will be converted into an exhibition venue later this year © Jacques Loïc – Photononstop

“Roger-Viollet is a really old-school agency, with hundreds of boxes of prints of photographic works, while France-Soir tells news stories of the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s,” says Gilles Taquet, the co-founder of Photononstop. “We need to preserve Roger-Viollets soul and make it a place where regular exhibitions can be organised.”

Roger-Viollet was founded in 1938 by the journalist Hélène Roger-Viollet and her husband Jean Fischer. In 1985, after Fischer killed his wife and was sent to prison, the former French president Jacques Chirac, then the mayor of Paris, took over the agency and its millions of images. The City of Paris, which owns the original prints, launched the tender for a new operator after Roger-Viollet ran into financial troubles, undercut by cheaper image banks.

The Neurdein brothers' view of the 1900 Exposition Universelle in Paris © Neurdein frères / Neurdein / Roger-Viollet

The city council acquired a large part of France-Soirs photographic holdings in 1987, followed by the rest of the collection in 2012, when the newspaper folded. The original prints from both archives are held at the municipalitys Bibliothèque Historique (Read More – Source

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