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CATEGORY: PHOTOGRAPHS

Unique print: for sale is the original print made by famous Magnum Photos photographer René Burri in 1963 of his iconic photograph of Ché Guevara. This provenance was confirmed in 2010, while Burri was present at the opening of his retrospective exhibition at the Kunsthal in Rotterdam, where he also dedicated and signed the print. The condition is poor, but it's beauty is far beyond later (digital) prints, caused by it's patina and all the 'scarfs' that were repaired in the past.

Creator:
René Burri (1933-2014, Switzerland)

Object:
Vintage photograph, titled Ché Guevara

Country:
Havana, Cuba

Design period:
1963

Production period:
1963

Identifying marks:
Title, dedication and place on verso.
Signature and date of signing (2010) on verso.

Style:
Journalism, portrait

Condition:
In poor, but stable, condition. The photo has folds, wrinkles, dents, scratches, discolorations and repairs in many places.

Material:
Gelatin silver print on baryta photographic paper

Colour:
Black & White

Dimensions:
Image: W 40.0 x H 30.0 cm | Matted: W 50.0 x H 40.0 cm


Biography
René Burri (9 April 1933 – 20 October 2014) was a Swiss photographer. Burri was a member of Magnum Photos and photographed major political, historical and cultural events and key figures of the second half of the 20th century. He made portraits of Che Guevara and Pablo Picasso as well as iconic pictures of São Paulo and Brasília.

Life and work
Burri studied at the Kunstgewerbeschule Zürich from 1949 to 1953, where he worked under Hans Finsler, Alfred Willimann and Johannes Itten. From 1953 to 1955 he began working as a documentary filmmaker while completing military service. During this time he also began working with Leica cameras. Then he worked for Disney as a cameraman until 1955. From 1956 to 1959 he traveled extensively to places including Turkey, Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Italy, France, Spain, Greece, Brazil, and Japan, which led to publications in Life, Look, Stern, Paris-Match, Réalités, Epoca, and New York Times, as well as a photographic essay "El Gaucho" which appeared in Du.

Burri first began working with Magnum Photos in 1955 through Werner Bischof, becoming a full member in 1959 and being elected chair of Magnum France in 1982. His first report "Touch of Music for the Deaf" on deaf-mute children was published by Life. In 1965 he assisted with the creation of Magnum Films which led to his work on the Magnum-BBC joint production of, The Two Faces of China. In 1967 he produced a documentary on the Six-Day War in Jerusalem for German television. He produced the film Jean Tinguely in 1972.

In 1963 Burri was working in Cuba when he was able to photograph the revolutionary Che Guevara; these images of Guevara smoking a cigar have become iconic. Notably, after taking the photos, Burri remembers Guevara "scaring the hell out of him". Describing a situation where an angry Che was pacing his tiny office like "a caged tiger", while being interviewed by an American woman from Look. While "hectoring" the reporter and "chomping on his cigar", Che suddenly looked Burri straight in the eye and told him "if I catch up with your friend Andy, I'll cut his throat" (while slowly drawing his finger across his neck). Andy was Andrew St. George, a fellow Magnum photographer, who had travelled with Che in the Sierra Maestra, and then later filed reports for American intelligence.

Burri died on 20 October 2014, aged 81.
RENÉ BURRI
(1933-2014)
Ché Guevara,
signed vintage (!)
silver gelatin print
1963
Stacks Image 65

Price on request