Yvette Troispoux

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Yvette Troispoux in 2001

Yvette Troispoux (1914–2007) was a French photographer known as the "photographer of photographers" for her pictures taken unobtrusively at photography exhibitions and social events. Her extensive body of work, built up over seventy years, also includes photographs of people in everyday settings in the "humanist” tradition. After her death, the French National Library acquired her archives for its collections.

She was born on 1 June 1914 to a middle-class family in Coulommiers.[1] When she was nineteen she used her savings to buy an Agfa box camera that allowed her to make 6cm x 9cm prints. The first shot she took was in a local park, the Parc des Capucins. Soon after that, the self-taught young woman entered a local photography competition and won first prize: a Kodak Pronto.[2] One of her best-known photographs from these early years, and her most treasured, is the picture of her brother Jean at Montparnasse railway station before he left for Algeria.[1] He was killed on military service there in 1939. Her father had died not long before.

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