Antoine Desilets
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Antoine Desilets | |
|---|---|
| Born | Jean Marcel Antoine Desilets September 15, 1927 |
| Died | December 19, 2019 (aged 92) |
| Occupation | Photographer |
| Children | 6, including Luc Desilets |
| Relatives | Georges Desilets (great-uncle) |
Antoine Desilets (15 September 1927 – 19 December 2019) was a Québécois photographer. He is known as the father of photojournalism in Quebec.
Early life
Jean Marcel Antoine Desilets was born on 15 September 1927 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada to Jean Sévère Desilets, a carpenter, and Cécile Dalpé. He was baptized on 18 September, and had his confirmation on 24 April by Monseigneur J.A Langlois.[1]: No. 99
His mother died in 1935, and his father grew unable to support the family financially.[2] At age 9,[3] Antoine was sent to the orphanage Christ-Roi in Nicolet with his five youngest siblings. Desilets's passion for photography was sparked by a visit to his great-uncle's photo lab at the archbishopric.[4] He obtained his secondary education in an English school of the Greater Montreal area.[5]
Desilets left the orphanage and worked under Hans Selye at McGill University. Uninterested with Selye's laboratory work, he instead enrolled in correspondence photography courses. By 18 years old, he had enlisted in the Royal Canadian Air Force. He was trained as an aerial photographer,[2] and then voluntarily got himself fired by refusing to follow orders.[4]
Career
Desilets's career began with freelance work and selling cameras.[3] Starting in 1955,[3] Desilets worked for Canadair while doing freelance contracts. He was fired after borrowing the company's Leica camera for outside work against company regulations.[4]
From 1957 to 1961,[3] Desilets then worked in Studio David Bier's darkroom. He had sent job applications to multiple newspapers, but none answered. Studio David Bier had contracts with Montreal Star and Montréal Matin for sports coverage.[4]
Through his father's contacts, Desilets obtained a job at La Presse[4][6] in 1961.[3] During the summer break, he filled in for photographers of the colored supplement for an important report. The supplement's director, Serge Larochelle, was impressed with the quality of Desilets's photographs and hired him. In 1969, Desilets was assigned to the newspaper's daily coverage, much to his dissatisfaction.[4]
Desilets resigned from La Presse in 1974 to join Le Jour. The newspaper's pro-independence position aligned with Desilets's politics. It ceased operations in 1976.[4]
Between 1976 and 1979, Desilets taught photography at CESTI's school of Dakar University, Senegal[5] for the federal government.[4] In 1981 he worked for the magazine Photo Sélection. He then went into semi-retirement as a freelancer.[3]
Later life
Desilets died on 19 December 2019.[2] By then, he was known as the father of photojournalism in Québec.[2][4] He had six children,[5] including Luc Desilets.[2]