Museum Home Past Exhibitions Recent History: Photographs by Luc Delahaye

July 31–November 25, 2007 at the Getty Center

ExhibitionEvents
Rally of Opposition Candidate Milinkevich / Delahaye
A Rally of the Opposition Candidate Alexander Milinkevich, negative, March 12, 2006; print, 2007
© Luc Delahaye
 
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This exhibition presents recent work by French photographer Luc Delahaye. Initiated in 2001, this series of large-scale photographs features significant recent events ranging from political demonstrations to natural disasters and evidence of war and genocides. While these subjects are known through the media, Delahaye's images propose a different view of them.

Registration of Internally Displaced People, Eastern Chad / Delahaye
The Registration of Internally Displaced People in Eastern Chad, negative, May 27, 2006; print, 2007
© Luc Delahaye
 
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For more than two decades, Delahaye has photographed world events. As a photojournalist working for magazines such as Newsweek, he has specialized in war photography, for which he has received numerous awards. Concurrently he has explored documentary-style photography in personal projects, which led him to this current series.

Delahaye's work describes well known events from a perspective different from the one we have become accustomed to in newspapers, on television, and on the Internet.

Delahaye's choice of subjects reveals an interest in the "ordinary." Unlike the sensational representation of international news, his photographs establish a bold visual record of the long-term implications of current events that go well beyond their initial moments in the headlines.

Delahaye records the continuity of human experience, as in this group of displaced women surrounding an official representative as they attempt to register to receive aid in a refugee camp in eastern Chad.

The Palestine Hotel / Delahaye
The Palestine Hotel, negative, April 15, 2003; print, 2004
© Luc Delahaye
 
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Using a large or medium-format camera, Delahaye records each scene with detail and accuracy. Taken from a distant point of view, the Palestine Hotel extends the field of vision to provide context beyond our usual perceptions.

While the direct nature of Delahaye's photographs, the detachment, and the rich details that emerge from them relate to documentary-style photography, their nearly life-size dimensions and their narrative power evoke the tradition of 18th- and 19th- century European painting.

132nd Ordinary Meeting of the Conference / Delahaye
132nd Ordinary Meeting of the Conference, negative, September 15, 2004; print, 2006
© Luc Delahaye
 
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By photographing seemingly mundane meetings, Delahaye provides unusual access to the working process of influential institutions such as the United Nations and the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).

Delahaye sometimes combines elements from different shots taken at the same event to create a more powerful rendering of the scene, as in this composition of an intense, active group of journalists at the 132nd Ordinary Meeting of the Conference. The chaotic backdrop contrasts with the official formality of the OPEC members seated along the table.

Aftermath in Meulaboh / Delahaye
Aftermath in Meulaboh, negative, January 9, 2005; print, 2006
© Luc Delahaye
 
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By positioning himself at eye level or above, Delahaye engages viewers as direct observers. His images appear to be momentarily halted theatrical performances that are open to our participation. Their dramatic scale emphasizes the fullness and complexity of the events depicted and also gives us the opportunity to examine their details.

Such pictures make us question our ability to comprehend the image, and images in general. Ultimately, the cool lyricism of Delahaye's photographs urges us to reflect upon the relationships among art, history, and information.

Delahaye's A Rally of the Opposition Candidate Alexander Milinkevich, in the Getty Center galleries
Delahaye's A Rally of the Opposition Candidate Alexander Milinkevich in the Getty Center galleries
 
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Delahaye's photographs in this exhibition are much larger than traditional photographs—some are as big as 8 to 10 feet wide. This view of the gallery where the photographs are on display illustrates the life-size scale of the work.