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Jean-Philippe Charbonnier : ウィキペディア英語版 | Jean-Philippe Charbonnier Jean-Philippe Charbonnier (August 28, 1921 – May 28, 2004) was a French photographer. ==Early life==
Jean-Philippe Charbonnier was born into a family of artists and intellectuals. His mother, Annette Vaillant was a writer and daughter of Alfred Natanson〔Who, incidentally, taught Vuillard photography; Guy Cogeval (2003) ''E. Vuillard'' Yale University Press〕 a.k.a. Alfred Athis, a founder of the Revue Blanche, and actress Martha Mellot; his father, Pierre Charbonnier, was a painter, and as a boy, Jean-Philippe met Max Ernst, Pierre Bonnard and the photographer Jacques-Henri Lartigue. His parents separated and he was brought up by his stepfather, Gustave Moutet. At the Lycée Condorcet in Paris he studied philosophy, English and German, but at 18, Jean-Philippe received a camera from his father who encouraged him to become a photographer, and he discontinued his studies to work in the movie star portrait studio of Sam Lévin ('discoverer' of Brigitte Bardot). He left his hometown to follow Lévin to Lyon, Marseille and Toulon, then went into exile for two years in neutral Switzerland early in the Second World War, where he met with Jean Manevy who instructed him in the art of typography and journalism.
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