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  1. Martine Franck was promoted to Officer in the French National Order of Merit and was the laureate of the Montblanc Cultural Prize, awarded for her work at the Henri Cartier-Bresson Foundation. Nearly one hundred portraits of artists taken by Martine Franck were also exhibited at the Claude Bernard Gallery in Paris in March/April 2012 .

  2. 20 de ago. de 2012 · Martine Franck–Magnum Veterans' parade, commemorating the armistice, New York City, Nov. 11, 1974. Martine Franck–Magnum Carnival in Basel, Switzerland, 1977.

  3. Martine Franck verbrachte ihre Kindheit in England und den USA. Sie studierte von 1956 bis 1957 Geschichte an der Universität von Madrid und von 1958 bis 1962 an der École du Louvre in Paris . Ihre ersten Erfahrungen als Fotografin machte sie 1963 im Fernen Osten. 1964 arbeitete sie als Fotoassistentin im Labor des Life -Magazins in Paris.

  4. C’est en rentrant à Paris que j’ai montré ces images au bureau de « Time Life ». On m’a proposé de devenir stagiaire. J’ai senti que j’avais trouvé ma voie. J’allais devoir travailler beaucoup. J’allais devenir photographe. Abécédaire de Martine Franck (2023) Martine Franck - Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson.

  5. 28 de jun. de 2019 · The Belgian Magnum photographer—who at the time was at Viva Agency—chose to take her pictures mostly in the South of France and spent two months focusing on a range of subjects. “I did not try to do a systematic documentation on the holidays of the French, the subject is too broad,” wrote Franck that same year.

  6. Martine Franck fundó en París con su marido el fotógrafo Henri Cartier-Bresson, la Fundación Henri Cartier-Bresson, que se convirtió en una fundación reconocida oficialmente el 11 de marzo de 2002, y se convirtió en su Presidente en 2004. Martine Franck falleció de cáncer en París, en el 2012 (Texto de la Agencia Magnum)

  7. Throughout her career Martine Franck oscilated between on the one hand photographing some of the world’s most famous artists and on the other, the most anonymous of subjects: those seemingly rendered invisible in society.