“ONE OF THE BEST PHOTOBOOKS OF THE 1960S”: BURRI’S LES ALLEMANDS
BURRI, René. Les Allemands [The Germans]. Paris: Encyclopédie Essentielle/Robert Delpire, (1963). Quarto, original glossy black paper-covered boards.
First French edition of Burri’s influential photobook, a key model of the “classic genre of European photojournalism” (Parr & Badger), with 80 finely screened photogravure plates.
René Burri’s Les Allemands (The Germans) was a highlight of French publisher Robert Delpire’s renowned series Encyclopédie essentialle, which also featured Robert Frank’s Les Américains (1958). “One of the best photobooks of the 1960s… Les Allemands exactly mirrors Les Américains in conception… Burri’s pictures are sharp and incisive, occupying an interesting middle ground between the controlled framing of the classic photojournalistic mode and the casual looseness of Frank… [Primarily] Burri is a documentary photographer, a photojournalist, in a way that Frank is not …He is both a responsible journalist and an extremely talented photographer” whose chronicle of postwar Germany makes Les Allemands a striking model of the “classic genre of European photojournalism” (Parr & Badger I:218, 190). Seventh in the French Encyclopédie essentialle series, this more highly desired first French edition is preceded one year by the German edition Die Deutschen. With text in French by Jean Baudrillard. As issued without dust jacket.
An exceptionally fine copy.