Peter Fetterman Gallery presents
Nouvelle Vague, an evocative survey celebrating the essence of French photography through the eyes of some of the twentieth century’s most admired artists. Bringing together works by
Edouard Boubat,
Raymond Cauchetier,
Henri Cartier-Bresson, Jean-Philippe Charbonnier,
Robert Doisneau,
Willy Ronis,
Sabine Weiss, and others, the exhibition pays tribute to a generation that forever transformed the language of visual storytelling in postwar France.
Emerging from the ideals of the French Humanist movement of the 1930s, these photographers created a visual style that balanced documentary realism with poetic sensibility. Their images captured fleeting moments of tenderness, humor, and quiet beauty within the rhythms of everyday life. Whether depicting lovers in a Parisian street, children at play, or workers returning home at dusk, their work sought to reveal the universal dignity and emotional depth of human experience. Positioned between journalism and fine art, these photographs offered an empathetic lens through which to view a world rebuilding itself after the devastation of war.
The Humanist spirit that animated these artists extended beyond photography, influencing film, literature, and visual art throughout the mid-twentieth century. Their collaborations with publications such as
LIFE,
Paris Match, and
Vogue helped disseminate this lyrical realism to a global audience, shaping the visual identity of modern France. Today, these images endure as timeless meditations on connection, resilience, and the quiet poetry of the ordinary.
Nouvelle Vague invites viewers to revisit the golden age of French photography while reflecting on its continuing relevance in a fractured contemporary world. The exhibition reaffirms photography’s enduring power to convey empathy and to remind us, across generations and borders, of our shared humanity.
Image:
Robert Doisneau
1912-1994
Le Baiser Blotto, 1950/Printed Later
Signed in ink on recto; titled and dated in ink on verso
Gelatin Silver Print
Image: 14-1/8" x 11-3/4", Paper: 20" x 16", Mat 24" x 20"