Les 30 × 40
Les 30 × 40 or Le Club photographique de Paris was a photography club created in Paris in 1952 by Roger Doloy who was its president, with vice-president Jean-Claude Gautrand, photographer and author, and honorary president Jean-Pierre Sudre, professional photographer.
The club produced a bimonthly mimeographed A4 publication Jeune Photographie and regularly organised exhibitions in the lobby of Studio 28, a cinema located at 28, rue Tholozé in Paris.
Amongst its members it boasted six Prix Niépce winners: Jean Dieuzaide, Robert Doisneau, Jean-Pierre Ducatez, Léon Herschtritt, Jean-Louis Swiners and Patrick Zachmann.
The club disbanded in 1998.
History
The club was formed against a rise in amateurism in French photography amongst a more prosperous, mobile and leisured populace, spurred by a proliferation of clubs and societies and supported by chemical and equipment supplier Kodak, whose factories at Vincennes, Sevran and Chalon-sur-Saône were in full production, and which offered prizes and sponsored magazines for both amateurs and professionals; Photo-Ciné Revue, Ciné-Photo, Le Photographe, and L'Officiel de la photographie. In 1958, the exclusive and increasingly insular and self-serving professionals of Le Groupe des XV held its last exhibition at the Grand Palais, during the Salon des Artistes décorateurs, to an indifferent reception.Lucien Clergue denounced what he and others saw as a pervasive, backward-looking, mediocrity and self-congratulation awarded by meaningless prizes. The Photographic Club of Paris marked a break with amateurism, and was known ironically as "Les 30 × 40", for the minimum dimensions required of prints presented at official exhibitions of the type organised by the National Federation of Photographic Societies of France.
Its initiator Roger Doloy, was a hospital administration employee and organised most of the weekly sessions, exhibitions, meetings, and internships. Finding inspiration in Daniel Masclet, who had been excluded from the Group of XV for his outspokenness, Doloy made him the honorary president of the club. Though at first opposed by Jean-Louis Swiners, Masclet prevailed by dint of his commitment and persistence.
Activities and ethos
The club attracted professionals who recognised its mission; photographers, curators, gallery owners, laboratory technicians, including Jean-Claude Lemagny, curator at the Bibliothèque Nationale, Michel Quétin, curator at the National Archives, gallery owner Agathe Gaillard, and Claude Mollard, senior civil servant and future president of the National Centre for Photography, as well as amateurs who came to rub shoulders with the five Niépce Award-winners who frequented the meetings.Registered at 52 rue Custine, a few streets north of Sacre Coeur, the organisation met every Thursday in the salons of the Club Alpine, 10 rue La Boétie, 75008 Paris, then at the Maison pour Tous and at the Centre International de Séjour in Paris. After a discussion of current exhibitions of photography, the members of the club, followed by their guests, presented their work and received a critique, in particular from Daniel Masclet, a seasoned photographer, who was present at all the sessions and seated in "His" armchair, in the first row. Professionals and amateurs confronted each other in critiques and debates in which Jean-Philippe Charbonnier was prominent, while the young guard, represented by Jean-Pierre Ducatez, Léon Herschtritt, Michel Kempf and Yvette Troispoux, rebelled against conformism and amateurism, and challenged their elders whose ambition had flagged, and asserted their point of view to defend an uncompromising conception of photography.
At a time when books on the history of photography were rare, or inaccessible, or centred on technique, the group provided a source of information; Jean-Louis Swiners, a Life magazine subscriber, shared the photographic essays of W. Eugene Smith, and Man Ray and Brassaï themselves presented on occasion, though even they were not immune to criticism from more militant members. Dealer André Jammes, collector of 19th century prints, showed his collection from the Missions Héliographiques, of Atget, or of neglected photographers from the School of Paris.
The reputation of the club was such that it hosted the significant American, European and other photographers passing through Paris. Few were the weeks when a foreign international photographer was not present on Thursday.
The club regularly organised exhibitions at Studio 28, rue Tholozé in the 18th arrondissement of Paris, and in Leningrad and London.