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Launched: AFP Photo Gallery – opens 12 September, Paris

Agence France-Presse (AFP) are opening their first photographic gallery in Paris on the 12 September 2024 – The AFP Gallery, located at 9 Place de la Bourse within the news agency’s headquarters, will offer free exhibitions three times a year, with the aim of delivering museum-quality events to the public.

  • Exhibition: Paris 1944, a Week in August 
  • Dates: 12th September to 2nd November 2024 
  • Location: AFP Gallery, 9 Place de la Bourse, Paris 75002 
  • Opening Hours: Wednesday to Saturday, 11am to 6pm 

The inaugural exhibition, titled “Paris 1944, a Week in August”, features a compelling mix of professional photographs from AFP’s extensive archives and amateur images captured by Parisians during the city’s liberation, drawn from the Fournier-Eymard Collection.  These two perspectives come together to “archive reality” with a profound emotional impact, “allowing viewers to engage with history,” says photography historian Gilles Mora, who wrote the preface for the exhibition catalogue.

The liberation of Paris stands out as one of the most visually documented events of the Second World War.

Several media professionals, including war correspondents and agency photographers, dedicated themselves to documenting the final battles in the heart of the capital. Many of them began working with AFP in its early days. Formerly known as Havas, the agency was placed under German supervision in 1940, subsequently taken over by the insurgents on 20th August 1944, and renamed Agence Française de Presse. They rallied around Henri Membré, who skilfully coordinated his colleagues’ reports while wearing an armband denoting his affiliation with the French Forces of the Interior (FFI). After the Liberation, he established AFP’s photography department.

At the same time, Parisians brought out their bellows cameras, which had been stored away since a German ordinance on the 16 September 1940 which banned outdoor photography. Despite the danger posed by rooftop snipers, those who still had film left risked their lives to document the moment. These photos, often blurry, taken from afar, and not always well-framed, capture the exhilaration of a moment they knew to be historic. Several hundred of these images ended up in the extensive collection of Alain Eymard and Laurent Fournier, two dedicated scholars renowned for their profound understanding of the Leclerc division and the liberation of Paris.

• Related news on PAN: Aug 26 2021: Photo print auction: AFP from the analogue archive – 3 Oct
• View all AFP on PAN

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