LACMA

ShopMembershipMyLACMATickets
LACMA
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
5905 Wilshire Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90036
info@lacma.org
(323) 857-6000
Sign up to receive emails
Subscribe
© Museum Associates 2026
  • About LACMA
  • Jobs
  • Building LACMA
  • Host An Event
  • Unframed
  • Press
  • FAQs
  • Log in to MyLACMA
  • Privacy Policy
© Museum Associates 2026
Collections

Henri Cartier-Bresson
Beijing , July 19581958

On view:
Geffen Galleries, Henri Cartier-Bresson: China in Transition
Black and white photograph of shirtless men pulling a large wheeled artillery piece along a road, with a building bearing a red star and Chinese characters in the background
Artist or Maker
Henri Cartier-Bresson
France, 1908-2004
Title
Beijing , July 1958
Place Made
China
Date Made
1958
Medium
Gelatin silver print
Dimensions
Image: 7 3/4 × 11 3/4 in. (19.69 × 29.85 cm) Primary support: 7 3/4 × 11 3/4 in. (19.69 × 29.85 cm)
Credit Line
Gift of Dennis and Pamela Beck
Accession Number
M.2006.144.20
Classification
Photographs
Collecting Area
Photography
Curatorial Notes

On November 25, 1948, French artist Henri Cartier-Bresson received a telegram from Magnum, the photographic cooperative he cofounded in 1947, asking him to go to China to work on a story for Life magazine titled “The Last Time We Saw Peiping.” He arrived in Beijing just as the Kuomintang was falling and stayed for twelve days until the People’s Liberation Army forced him to move on. For ten months, between December 1, 1948, and September 23, 1949, he documented the retreat of Nationalist forces and the establishment of communism throughout the country, shooting nearly 900 photographs. Dozens of these images were published in Life as well as Illustrated (London) and Regards (Paris), in some forty photo-essays. He returned to China a decade later, in 1958, staying for four months, between June 16 and October 23. This trip was meticulously arranged by his Chinese hosts and yielded 376 rolls of film. The photographs from both trips have been compiled into three books: From One China to Another (1956), China: As Photographed by Henri Cartier-Bresson (1964), and Henri Cartier-Bresson: China 1948−1949, 1958 (2019).

The directive from Life was to concentrate on scenes that revealed “Chinese culture and character, the human angle of the city.” Cartier-Bresson made handwritten notes about each roll of film, which he then turned into captions. Tracing the caption of this photograph is interesting. In the 1964 publication China: As Photographed by Henri Cartier-Bresson, it reads: “Workers pull a new lathe through the streets of Peking. Such sights are a frequently seen symptom of China’s growing industrial pains.” In the 2019 book Henri Cartier-Bresson: China, the editorial commentary has been removed: “Workers pull a new lathe on a cart through the streets of Beijing.”

Cartier-Bresson often used the term “the decisive moment” to describe that fraction of a second when the precise organization of forms and the significance of an event converge in the camera. The images made in China reveal his efforts to capture the interconnected worlds of cultural events, political figures, Maoist propaganda campaigns, ordinary people, and landscapes. His work in China during this turbulent time was critical for his career and established him as a pioneer of photojournalism.

Rebecca Morse, Curator, Wallis Annenberg Photography Department

2025

Copyright
© Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos