Kolkata to Dhaka, 1971: Marc Riboud’s Lens on History


Kolkata to Dhaka, 1971: Marc Riboud’s Lens on History 
A Photographic Chronicle of Humanity, Resilience, and Liberation


Exhibition Dates: March 15 - March 29, 2025
Venue: First Floor Gallery, Kolkata Centre for Creativity

Organised by: Kolkata Centre for Creativity, Alliance Française du Bengale, in collaboration with Les amis de Marc Riboud, Guimet - National Asian Arts Museum, Liberation War Museum, and Alliance Française de Dhaka.

With the support of: Institut Français en Inde

Exhibition Overview

Kolkata Centre for Creativity, in collaboration with Alliance Française du Bengale, present the exhibition, "Kolkata to Dhaka, 1971: Marc Riboud’s Lens on History ", a tribute to one of the most celebrated photojournalists of the 20th century. Through his lens, we see not just history but the human stories behind it. This exhibition offers a unique opportunity to rediscover these moments through the eyes of an artist who was committed to revealing the depth of human emotions in times of crisis.

About the Photographer
Marc Riboud is born in 1923 in Saint-Genis-Laval near Lyon. In 1937 at the Exposition Universelle in Paris he takes his first photos using a small vest pocket Kodak given to him by his father for his 14th birthday. In 1942 he joins the resistance and, in 1944, fights in the Vercors. He studies engineering at the Ecole Centrale in Lyon and starts to work. Three years after he decides to become a photographer.

In 1953 his photograph of a painter on the Eiffel Tower appears in Life Magazine. This is his first publication. Invited by Henri Cartier-Bresson and Robert Capa he joins Magnum Photos agency. In 1955, he travels by road through the Middle East and Afghanistan to India and stays for one year. In 1957 he travels from Calcutta to China making the first of what will be many long stays. His road trip to the East ends in Japan where he finds the subject for what will become his first book, Women of Japan. In 1960, after a three-month stay in the USSR, he covers the struggles for independence in Algeria and Sub-Saharan Africa. Between 1968 and 1969 he photographs in both South and North Vietnam, one of the rare photographers allowed entry.

In the 80s and 90s, he returns regularly in Orient and Far East, especially in Angkor and Huang Shan, but he also follows the rapid and considerable change of China, a country he has been looking at for thirty years. In 2011 Marc Riboud makes a dation in payment of 192 original prints made between 1953 and 1977 to the National Museum of Modern Art (Centre Georges Pompidou), Paris. His work has been distinguished by prestigious awards and is exhibited in museums and galleries in Paris, New York, Shanghai, Tokyo, etc.

Marc Riboud passed away in Paris, at 93 years old, on August 30th 2016. The core of his archives has been donated to Guimet National Asian Arts Museum, Paris, in 2019.