WRITINGS ON
HENRI CARTIER-BRESSONChim, like Robert Capa, was a Parisian from Montparnasse. He had the intelligence of a chess player; with the air of a math teacher he applied his vast curiosity and culture to a great number of subjects.
We had been friends since 1933. The precision of his critical spirit had rapidly become indispensable to those around him. Photography to him was a pawn that he moved all over the chessboard of his
intelligence.
Another of his pawns, kept in reserve, was his culinary delicacy, which he handled with gentle authority by always ordering the good wines and elaborate dishes himself. He had one item of personal elegance: his black silk ties.
His perspicacity, his very delicacy often gave him a sad, even disabused smile, which brightened if one humored him. He gave and demanded much human warmth. He had so many friends everywhere; he was a born godfather.
When I went to announce his death to his friend David Schoenbrunn, he said to me in the conversation that followed: “You and I know each other very little. And yet Chim was a friend to both of us. He was a man of secret compartments and he forgot to make them communicate”. He accepted the servitudes of his profession and turned out to be brave in situations that seemed utterly foreign to his personality. Chim picked up his camera the way a doctor takes his stethoscope out of his bag, applying his diagnosis to the condition of the heart; his own was vulnerable.
Henri Cartier-Bresson
Written on the occasion of the tenth anniversary of David Seymour’s death.