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Vine and the Wine in Fine Art Photography

WINE, A NATURAL SUBJECT FOR NIÉPCE

1. Although the ‘inventor’ of photography, Nicéphore Niépce only took two photographs himself. Some believe La Table servie to have been the first of these (1823-5); recently, however, it has been argued that the image may in fact have been his second work (1832-3). The plate was lost among the collections of the Société Française de Photographie at the start of the 20th century.

 

What could have been a more natural subject for Niépce’s still life than a table set with wine? Like many painters of the period, he photographed the things he saw around him. This is true of Point de vue du Gras (1927), a photograph taken from the window of his house in Saint-Loup-de-Varennes, near Chalon-sur-Saône. Aside from the fact that drinking wine at the table was an everyday activity in the 19th century, it is worth remembering that Niépce came from Burgundy!

WITH CIRCE, PRAMNIAN WINE BECOMES A WICKED POTION

2. Julia Margaret Cameron is known for portraits of celebrities of her era. However, she also created photographic illustrations inspired by the English Pre-Raphaelites. She spent time with Dante Gabriel Rosetti, one of the founders of the movement. Pre-Raphaelite women tend to be represented either as redeeming angels or dangerous seductresses; their value in such paintings tends to be symbolic and rooted in Bible stories or mythology. This photograph is a study for a portrait of the goddess Circe (known to the Greeks as Demeter). The young girl has long, loose hair – a feature of many Pre-Raphaelite women. Nor is it rare for such female figures to be crowned with laurel leaves, flowers or stars. But why is Circe crowned with bunches of grapes here?

The fruit is meant to remind the viewer of the episode in Homer’s Odyssey, where Circe offers a potion, laced with Pramnian* wine, to Ulysses’ shipmates; the drink transforms the crew into pigs, trapping them on the island of Aeaea: “She brought them in and made them sit on chairs and seats, and made for them a potion of cheese and barley meal and yellow honey with Pramnian wine; but in the food she mixed baneful drugs, that they might utterly forget their native land. Now when she had given them the potion, and they had drunk it off, then she presently smote them with her wand, and penned them in the sties. And they had the heads, and voice, and bristles, and shape of swine, but their minds remained unchanged even as before. So they were penned there weeping, and before them Circe flung mast and acorns, and the fruit of the cornel tree, to eat, such things as wallowing swine are wont to feed upon.” (The Odyssey, Book 10, ll. 230-43). Circe lives on a deserted island, in a forest of wild beasts who seem domesticated. These animals are, of course, men that she has transformed with the help of her wine-based potion. Thus she changes Ulysses’ crew into pigs when they arrive on her island. Eurylochus is the only one of the party to escape the spell.

 

Hermes had given Ulysses a magic plant – the holy ‘moly’ – which has black roots and milky white flowers. Ulysses uses the herb to resist Circe’s magic, then pulls out his sword; frightened, Circe invites the hero into her bed. Still mindful of Hermes’ warnings, Ulysses makes the witch swear ‘by the Gods’ not to harm him. This done, the pair unite and Circe undoes the spell, giving Ulysses’ shipmates back their human appearance. A year goes by before Circe helps the crew to leave the island, advising them to visit Tiresias in the Underworld.

 

We can add to these explanations, given in Homer’s original text, by noting that Pramnian wine is produced on the hillsides of the mountain of the same name, situated on the island of Icaria in the Aegean Sea, not far from Samos. It is here that Zeus is said to have ‘given birth’ to Dionysus, the ‘twice-born’ (see below). Circe also shared her bed with Bacchus/Dionysus, with whom she had a son, Cornus. The pairing of these two divinities seems quite natural: together, they symbolically ensure man’s survival, one of the pair providing staple foodstuffs and the other providing wine. This being the case, it is no surprise that Julia Margaret Cameron chose this particular hairstyle for her subject! 

Pramnian wine was “a rude, austere wine, black in the shade and purple in the light. Hippocrates recommended it for hemorrhages” (Charles-Joseph Panckoucke).

DIONYSUS, THE ‘TWICE-BORN’

3. Iconography dealing directly with the ‘second birth’ of Dionysus is very limited. Dionysus is the only god to be born of a mortal mother: according to Homer, he is the son of Zeuz and Semele, the daughter of Cadmos, King of Thebes, and Harmonia. Zeus was the lover of Semele for so long that, of her own initiative or persuaded by a jealous Hera, the princess wished to see him as a god – as his lover, the pregnant Semele only ever saw Zeus in the dark.

 

Zeus, who had promised to carry out her wish, was forced to reveal himself. Struck by his lightning, Semele died on the spot. Zeus removed the baby from her womb, sewing it into his thigh – centre of life-force in Indo-European culture – until Dionysus came to term, ‘born from the thigh of Jupiter’. Dionysus (‘the twice-born’) is therefore twice the son of Zeus in two ways. 

BACCHUS OR CHRIST?

4. This work of Caravaggio can be seen as a self-portrait of the artist as Bacchus/Christ, who is shown offering himself as a communion Eucharist – ‘Eucharist’ means ‘good flesh’ – to the libertine cardinals of Rome; he holds to his lips a bunch of golden, juicy grapes, in an admittedly sensual manner.

 

Crowned with ivy and dressed in an Antique-style toga which reveals a muscular shoulder, he holds the bunch of green grapes to his chest, seemingly wishing to squeeze the juice from the divine fruit. We can draw two conclusions from this: either that the Greek wine takes the guise of Eucharistic wine in order to bring ever more people to the feast; or that the wine of Christ transforms the bacchanalia into a kind of ‘universal Mass’.

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SICK BACCHUS

Caravaggio, 1593 - Oil on canvas, Galleria Borghese, Rome, Italye

Cindy Sherman recreates this image, putting herself at the heart of it both as model and photographer. In this self-portrait as Bacchus, she reinterprets Caravaggio’s work. The pose, framing and light are the same, but the metamorphosis of the model’s body forces us to revisit this otherwise-familiar image. This photo accentuates the Christian character of the original work: Sherman attaches herself, body and soul, to the ‘grapes of the Lord’, which she holds ostentatiously in her hand. 

Find out more: Gallery Dionysus / Bacchus, God of Wine >>

KIKI OF MONTPARNASSE

5. In his memoires, Man Ray recounts that Alice Prin, known as Kiki of Montparnasse, refused to pose for him, protesting that “photographers can only record reality”. Remembering his response to Kiki, he writes: “Not me...I photographed as I painted, transforming the subject as a painter might do. Like a painter, I idealised or deformed my subject”. During the années folles of the 1920s, society converged around art exhibitions and wild parties: the soirées of the Baroness of Oettingen, the minstrel balls featuring Youki and especially Kiki, queen of such events.

 

Her beauty and kindness made her the darling of penniless artists and the very essence of a ‘bohemian’. She had her break as a singer, singing on the terrace of the Rotonde and in the Jockey, a fashionable nightclub. Numerous painters used her as a model: Modigliani, Soutine, Picasso, Foujita, Derain... One of her many lovers, Man Ray immortalized her in numerous photos. People came from far and wide to see and hear her; her image was on the cover of magazines; she had everything: money, jewelry, furs and cars. The Second World War marked the end of Kiki’s golden years. The socialite was eventually reduced to palm-reading in cafes; addicted to drugs and alcohol, she died in 1953. Adding to the composition an egg and a glass of wine, here Man Ray writes a surrealist love poem to his mistress, his favorite model and the woman of his dreams – of whom only the hand and the profile are visible.

THE PARIS WINE MARKET ON THE QUAY SAINT BRNARD

 

7. The Paris wine market, found along the river Seine on the Quai Saint Bernard, has been the domain of the capital’s wine merchants since the mid-17th century. The Paris wine market was created by the Cardinal Mazarin and first opened its doors in 1665. Previously occupied by the monks of the Abbaye Saint-Victor, the site may have been used for growing vines for the church’s wine. The market was open to all wine merchants, including foreigners, on payment of a fee. Enjoying a better layout and better location on the Seine, the market replaced the nearby Port de la Tournelle, previously the main site of the Paris wine trade. 

 

Parisian wine consumption began to rise from the start of the 19th century, going from 1 million hectolitres in 1800 to 3.550 in 1865. In order to deal with this trend, in 1808 city planners decided to build a new wine market, which was finally completed in 1845. However, the building had insufficient storage space and could not cope with the changes brought by the arrival of the railway. In 1869 the government decided to build new warehouses in Bercy, on the other side of the Seine. In 1905, the French parliament obliged large wine merchants to open branches on both the Bercy site and the Paris market. 

 

Until the start of the 20th century, the two Parisian warehouses were equally important. However, the Saint Bernard market’s gradual specialization into fine wines and spirits and the extension of the Bercy site in 1910 meant that the latter soon gained precedence. In 1930, the Bercy site hosted 70 per cent of wine stock and trade, while the Saint Bernard market had the remaining 30 per cent. The traders of the Saint Bernard wine market finally moved off the site in 1964.

THE RETURN TO BASICS, PROTECTION OF THE ENVIRONMENT

OLD PARIS AND WINE WITH ATGET, "FROM DOCUMENT TO FINE ART PHOTOGRAPHY"

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Bassin de la Villette

1905/06 - Moma, New York

Port du Louvre

1911 -  Moma, New York

Haquet, voiture à transporter des tonneaux de vin

Musée Carnavalet, Paris

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Entrepôt de Bercy

1913) - Moma, New York

Entrepôts de Bercy, Halle aux vins, 12ème arr.

1903 - Musée Carnavalet, Paris

Un coin de l'entrepôt de Bercy, 12ème arr.

1913 - Musée Carnavalet, Paris

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L'Ancienne Ecole de médecine, rue de la Bûcherie

1898 - Getty, Los Angeles

Café Procope, 13 rue de l'Ancienne Comédie, 6ème arrondissement

Musée Carnavalet, Paris

Au Port Salut, cabaret, Rue des Fossés St Jacques

1903 - Musée Carnavalet, Paris

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Boutique, 12 rue des Lyonnais

1914 ? - Moma, New York

18 et 20 impasse Masséna, porte d'Ivry, 13ème arr., Paris

1910 - Musée Carnavalet, Paris

Marchand de vin, boulevard Masséna

1912 - Moma, New York

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A l'agneau pascal, cabaret, 11 r. de Valance, 5ème arr. 1910/11 - Musée Carnavalet, Paris

A la Grappe d'or, 4 place d'Aigre, 12ème arr.

1911 - Moma, New York

Marchand de vin, rue Boyer

1910/11 - The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Boulevard Masséna

1912 - Moma, New York

SCENES OF DAILY LIFE WITH BRASSAÏ, BILL BRANDT, WILLY RONIS, HENRI-CARTIER BRESSON, AND ROBERT DOISNEAU

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La Môme Bijou au Bar de la lune, Montmartre Brassaï, 1933

Brassaï : Lulu de Montparnasse (1933)

Lulu de Montparnasse

Brassaï, 1933 - Collection particulière

Brassaï : Soirée de gala chez Maxim's (1949

Soirée de gala chez Maxim's 

Brassaï, 1949 - MoMA, New York

Brassaï : in d'honneur au Palais des ducs, Djon (1936)

Vin d'honneur au Palais des ducs, Dijon

Brassaï, c. 1936

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Bill Brandt : Le personnel est prêt à servir le dîner, nord de l'Angleterre (1936)

Après la fête, Londres

Bill Brandt, 1934

Le personnel est prêt à servir le dîner, nord de l'Angleterre - Bill Brandt, c. 1934, Met, NYC

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Vigneron girondin

Willy Ronis, 1945 - Centre Pompidou, Paris

Henri-Cartier Bresson : Un dimanche sur les bords de la Marne (1936-1938)

Un dimanche sur les bords de la Marne

Henri-Cartier Bresson, 1936/38 - Musée d'art moderne de Paris

"I walked all day, my spirit tense, searching the streets for photos to grab as if red-handed. 
Of all means of expression, photography is the only one which fixes a precise moment. 
We play with things which disappear, and, once they have disappeared, it is impossible to make them live again.
What man builds is relatively durable, whereas each fragment of his life can be seized or lost in the space of a second.
Seizing this fraction of a second is, I think, the photographer’s most important role."

 

Henri-Cartier Bresson and Fondation Gianadda, Szafran Collection, 2022

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Rome

Henri-Cartier Bresson, 1952

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Rue Mouffetard, Paris

H. Cartier Bresson, 1954 - MoMA, NYC

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Bistrot, Paris

Henri-Cartier Bresson, 1952

Henri-Cartier Bresson : Vigneron Champenois (1960)

Vigneron Champenois

Henri-Cartier Bresson, 1960

Robert Doisneau : Les auvergnats de la rue Coulmiers (1950)

Les auvergnats de la rue Coulmiers, Paris XIVe

Robert Doisneau, 1950

Robert Doisneau : Coco (1952)

Coco, Paris

Robert Doisneau, 1952

Robert Doisneau : Jacques Prévert au guéridon (1955)

Jacques Prévert au guéridon

Robert Doisneau, 1955

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Un verre de vin à 6h du matin

Robert Doisneau, 1950

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Scène de café, Les Halles, Paris

Robert Doisneau, 1953

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Au bistrot, Paris

Robert Doisneau, 1950

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Au café Chez Fraysse, rue de Seine, Paris

Robert Doisneau, 1958 - MoMA, New York

WITH IRVING PENN, POSE AND SOPHISTICATION

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Photographie de mode pour Vogue, New York

1949, - The Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC

Chapeau II, Jeune femme derrière une bouteille

1949

Jeune femme buvant (Mary Jane Russell), New York

1949, - Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC

Jeune femme derrière un verre, New York

1949, - Lacma, Los Angeles

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Homme allumant la cigarette d'une jeune femme

(Jean Patchett), 1949, - Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC

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Jean Patchett dans un café à Lima, Pérou

1949 - The Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC

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Garçon de café, Les Deux Magots, Paris 

1950, - Getty Museum, Los Angeles

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Nature morte à New York

1947 - Art Institute Chicago (AIC), Etats-Unis

ACROSS THE ARTS

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