The solo photography exhibition "Bangladesh 1971: Mourning and Morning" by Marc Riboud has begun at La Galerie of Alliance Française de Dhaka.
Supported by L'association Les amis de Marc Riboud, and Musée Guimet, Bangladesh 1971: Mourning and Morning is a unique exhibition of some powerful photographs taken during the Bangladesh liberation war.
Education Minister Dipu Moni inaugurated the exhibition, jointly curated by Lorène Durret and Mofidul Hoque, at 7:30pm Friday.
Bernd Spanier, chargé d'affaires ad interim of the Delegation of the European Union to Bangladesh, and Guillaume Audren de Kerdrel, chargé d'affaires ad interim at the Embassy of France in Bangladesh, also attended the event.
One of the first generations of Magnum photographers, French veteran photographer Riboud was born in Saint-Genis-Laval, near Lyon, in 1923. He shot his first photographs at the Exposition Universelle in Paris in 1937, using a tiny Vest Pocket Kodak given to him by his father for his 14th birthday.
In 1944, he joined the Vercors resistance. From 1945 to 1948, he studied engineering at Lyon's Ecole Centrale and began working. Three years later, he chose to pursue a career as a photographer.
His photo of a painter atop the Eiffel Tower was published in Life magazine in 1953. This was his first published work. Afterwards, he joined the Magnum Photos agency after being invited by Henri Cartier-Bresson and Robert Capa.