An exhibition of René Burri's more explorative work showcases the Swiss photojournalist’s obsession with pushing the boundaries of photography.
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As a photo editor I am responsible for the editorial use of photography at SWI swissinfo.ch and our collaborations with photographers. When the opportunity arises, I take a camera and accompany one of our journalists.
I trained as a photographer in Zürich and began working as a photojournalist in 1989. I was a founder of the Swiss photographers' agency Lookat Photos in 1990. A two-time World Press Award winner, I have also been awarded several Swiss national scholarships. My work has been widely exhibited and it is represented in various collections.
Thomas Kern (picture editor and text), swissinfo.ch
Since 2013, the Musée de l’Elysée’s René Burri’s private archive has housed 30,000 images. The exhibition René Burri, Explosions of SightExternal link can be viewed in Lausanne until May 3.
Burri, best known for his iconic portrait of Che Guevara smoking a cigar, died in 2014 at the age of 81 after a long career. He travelled widely for his reporting and remained a traveller for the rest of his life. However, Burri never forgot where he came from, and the special nature of a life between two countries – Switzerland and his second home France – always played a role in his work.
The title of the exhibition “Explosions of Sight” suggests something big, uncontrolled and wild. It reflects Burri’s desire to break out of the technical limitations that are naturally inherent in photography.
René Burri attended the photography class led by Hans Finsler at the Zurich University of the ArtsExternal link. This was an environment in which photography began to embed itself in the world of art. Here, the new possibilities of the medium were still directly opposed to the traditional forms of the fine arts. Drawing and sketching were taught as a school of seeing that complemented photography.
Burri was also inspired by his acquaintances. Another well-known Swiss photojournalist, Werner Bischof, always carried a sketch pad as part of his equipment.
In 1993 Bischof travelled to Cuba for the cultural magazine DU. The editor in charge, Marco Meier, met him there and described how he himself was picked up at the airport in Havana by Burri:
“I felt as if I was coming home. Fatherly Burri had already made a lot of preparations. His room in the Hotel Inglaterra was prepared as if it were his living room – books everywhere, photos of his second wife, cigars, notebooks, sketchbooks for his collages, watercolours, brushes and, inevitably, the limes and rum for a first mojito.”
(All images: Rene Burri/Magnum Photos/Fondation Rene Burri/Museé de l’Elysée.)
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Photographer René Burri has died at 81
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Burri, who was born in Zurich in 1933 and later moved to Paris, was hired by the prestigious Magnum agency in 1955, and travelled around the world documenting the major political events of the 20th Century. Burri was only 13 years old when he photographed British Prime Minister Winston Churchill standing in an open-top car…
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swissinfo caught up with Burri, whose work is on show in a retrospective at Lausanne’s Elysée Photography Museum. Zurich-born Burri, 70, has wielded his lens on behalf of Magnum, the BBC, and several magazines, including “Life”. In the 1960s, he photographed Picasso, Giacometti and Le Corbusier, and in 1963 while working in Cuba he immortalised…
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If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.