Claude Batho Explained

Claude Louise Batho (née Bodier; 1 June 1935 – September 1981) was a French photographer.[1] She is remembered for the detailed images of her home and for her series on Claude Monet's garden at Giverny.

Biography

Born in Chamalières in the Puy-de-Dôme, Batho graduated in photography from the École des arts appliqués in 1956.[2] She went on to work in the archives at the Bibliothèque nationale de France where she met her husband, John Batho, also a photographer. Her black-and-white photographs, published in Le Moment des Choses, document details of the inside of her home: a broom leaning against a wall, a fading bunch of flowers, her little daughter asleep on the couch, all represented with surprising intensity, evoking a feeling of nostalgia and sadness.[3] Her images of Claude Monet's garden at Giverny, taken in October 1980, shortly before she died, also include glimpses of her family, almost as if their fleeting figures were included by accident. The square-shaped prints contrast sharply with the formats of Monet's own works.[2]

Claude Batho died of cancer when she was only 46.[3]

Works

Exhibitions

Examples of Claude Batho's photographs can be seen online at the Centre Pompidou.

Notes and References

  1. http://www.luminous-lint.com/app/photographer/Claude__Batho/A/ "Claude Batho"
  2. http://www.decitre.fr/auteur/368832/Claude+Batho/ "Claude Batho: Biographie"
  3. http://espace-holbein.over-blog.org/article-3772144.html "Claude Batho"