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Harry Gruyaert: La part des choses
From June 15 to September 24, LE BAL presents the works of Belgian photographer Harry Gruyaert, featuring a vast selection of vintage Cibachrome prints. This exhibition traces an unprecedented journey through the works of an iconic figure in contemporary photography
Harry Gruyaert, born in Antwerp in 1941, stands as one of the pioneers of color photography, inspired by the great American photographers he discovered and admired from an early age, such as Joel Meyerowitz, William Eggleston, and Stephen Shore. Departing from the confines of his native Belgium, Gruyaert found himself in New York during the early 1970s, where he encountered pop art and learned to “view the ordinary with a fresh perspective, accepting the inherent beauty in the world, even in its ugliness.” Influenced by his interactions with avant-garde artists like Gordon Matta-Clark and Richard Nanas, Gruyaert’s outlook was further shaped by Antonioni’s film “Red Desert,” a work he had watched countless times, instilling in him a profound desire to explore the world—to immerse himself fully, not merely to describe or inform, but to mold and shape it. His goal was to capture his own perception of things rather than the things themselves—to become a visionary rather than a mere observer.
Gruyaert describes this process as a physical struggle, an intimate battle with objects and individuals: “I throw myself into things, immersing myself in their mystery and alchemy. Things attract me, and I, in turn, attract things.” In the flow of life, where everything seems to slip through our fingers, Gruyaert believes that in order for “everything to fall into place,” one must simultaneously be present and absent—losing oneself to fully grasp the essence, the texture, and every aspect of the here and now. This requires cultivating a sense of foresight and surrendering to an instinctual arrangement of forms, colors, symbols, light, and motifs.
Alain Bergala, in “Correspondance New Yorkaise,” distinguishes between two types of photographers: those who believe in reality and make photography a means of capturing presence, and those who perceive reality as elusive, only able to capture absence. According to this perspective, Harry Gruyaert stands as an anomaly—a photographer whose visceral presence in the world aims above all to capture its fleeting and intangible nature. Through his images, characterized by isolated trajectories, disjointed spaces, and bodies on the fringes, Gruyaert’s patterns contribute to revealing the absurdity of the world, the surreal collage of life and its fragmented moments.
“What if photography could be about communing with a state of solitude and telling a lie that is truer than truth itself.” (Diane Dufour)
This exhibition brings together, for the first time, 80 vintage prints created between 1974 and 1996 using the cibachrome process. Known for its sharpness, vibrant colors, and saturated surfaces, cibachrome was invented by Hungarian chemist Bela Gaspar in 1933 and trademarked in 1963. It involves producing prints from slides through the destruction of dyes incorporated into the exposed and developed paper emulsion—a positive-to-positive process. These rare prints have been generously loaned to Le BAL from various collectors and Gallery FIFTY ONE in Antwerp, allowing this extraordinary gathering of works to take place.
On the occasion of the exhibition, LE BAL Books offers an exclusive limited edition print by the Belgian photographer. Limited edition print of the photograph: “Belgium, Brussels, Brussels-Midi Station, 1981 © Harry Gruyaert / Magnum Photos”.
Harry Gruyaert : La part des choses From June 15 to September 24, 2023 LE BAL – Paris
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I came across street photography in 2014 after having tried almost every genre of photography since completing my photography apprenticeship back in 2011.
Inspired to a large extent by the photographers Bruce Gilden, Vivian Maier, Elliott Erwitt, Alex Webb and others, I’ve been moving through the streets ever since, trying to incorporate a bit of everything into my photos. But the bottom line for me is about the real, decisive moment. Not staged and pure. For me, this form of photography is the opposite of predominantly commissioned photography, where everything usually has to be beautiful and aesthetic.
I was lucky enough to be part of several exhibitions and I am the Co founder of the “Munichstreetcollective” together with Sebastian Hermann. In addition to street photography, I also do commercial stuff and free shootings with models predominantly on analog film. I was born and grew up in Munich, Germany. I am married and have two children. My main job is as a TV cameraman and photographer.


















It was winter of 2020 when I moved into a new apartment in Manhattan. One month later, news from overseas brought an unknown virus: COVID-19 was spreading everywhere. Soon the stores, restaurants, and museums were closed. The shadows of fear and loneliness were everywhere. The city that never sleeps was finally asleep.
Weeks passed and I was trapped in a tiny studio apartment in Manhattan. I tracked the number of dead in the news, and I heard that some stores were being looted and some types of food were not available anymore. New York looked like a different city to me. After a few weeks of living in lockdown, an inner force asked me to go out, a curiosity mixed with anxiety. I had more free time to walk in the evening and at night, so I started walking in the streets I used to know for many years. From Grand Central Terminal to park benches in my neighborhood, from a local coffee shop to Central Park and streets nearby, I roamed around and tried to get to know the place where I was living.
I started the project in March 2020 and continued it until the end of the year.















The environment is delimited, circumscribed of the subway, with a complete absence of the external landscape that often represents a container of memories.The protagonists are absorbed in their thoughts with their heads bowed or intent on looking with the absent gaze of those who look but do not see, as if they were imprisoned in their inner world. We are almost facing an aquarium in which motionless and / or unconscious fish swim. Loneliness is almost palpable and silence seems to saturate every space of the environment in a metaphysical suspension. People anonymous, unknown, isolated, closed in themselves, unable to communicate, who despite being close to each other almost never interact with each other. The scene is still, extracted from the present and frozen out of time. (Metropolitan Fragments is an ongoing project)











Birth in 1983, Franco, I grew up in an artistic family. My uncle was a known artist in the field of contemporary painting. I myself after finishing my academic study in the universities of Paris and obtained my master’s degree in International & E-Commerce, jointed to public society more involved to the ordinary life of people around the world.
Then I have started to capture the scenes and promote the feel of photography art by observing the path of the great photographers like as Cartier Bresson and Sebastiao Salgado and oriented my sense to taking the shot in the street by recording every moment of the ordinary life, basically on the technic of BnW. Knowing the fact that the initiate’s motivation of the photographer is capturing all that is commonly unnoticed, the age of Covid and pandemic for me was the exploring a unique word that it was reflected exactly what was differently attractive in front of my camera.





















“In Magenta” is a series I completed in February 2021. I’ve been trying through the use of a flash off camera and an old reflex to explore my hometown, my neighbours, the beach, where people wander endlessly and dead bodies are carried on the shore, unable to escape. The use of colour is meant to underline the enstrangement between me and what I once called home following the Corona Virus pandemic and the global lockdown.











Densely populated and hyper-connected by technology, people in thriving metropolises are paradoxically growing further apart; some finding solace in their solitude.










Hauptbahnhof, the main train station in Frankfurt Germany, is a major hub for European travel. The skylights generate good light and as I have been there many times, I like to photograph there. All photos are candid and mostly no more than 10 feet away.









These pictures were born of necessity. As the global Covid-19 pandemic raged during the Summer of 2020, the epidemic of police killings sparked mass Black Lives Matter protests throughout the United States. But as thousands of people took to the streets, I was obliged to shelter at home as the protests, and the often brutal police reaction, played out on screens in television newscasts, live streams, and video uploads, bringing the streets into our homes. And so, I photographed the screens as I watched, a process that distorted reality, just as it paradoxically revealed its intensity and emotion. Although I was physically distant, the images felt intensely present.











The song from Los del Rio* has always told us that Seville has a special color (by the way, I still do not know which one it is). From Benidorm, which also has a “special color”, I found it very quickly: The electric blue. Beyond the “guiri”* tourism and IMSERSO* travellers, Benidorm gives off joy, light and color in all its corners. The Sun of the Levant and the Mediterranean sea, are the main guilties of all this. In this context of almost infinite vacations, is where the electric blue is omnipresent. In the streets, in the buildings, in the posters, in the clothes and of course in the sky and in the sea. Everything is blue. My surrendered look, was seduced by the blue, mainly because escape from it is almost an impossible task. The images of this serie were born from this almost dictatorial charm.*Los del Río: Spanish musical duo characterized by its flamenco style of flamenco pop and flamenco rumba. *Guiri: Colloquial term to refer to foreign tourists. *IMSERSO: Institute of Seniors and Social Services of the Government of Spain.








