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Camp de réfugiés de Bram Tirage argentique
Archives Centelles, Barcelone / © ADAGP, Paris, 2009

Agustí Centelles, Bram camp, Aude, 1939

Maison de l’Archéologie de Bram

From 07 November to 15 December 2009

Extramural

This exhibition retraces the internment in the Bram camp in France (1939) of Catalan photographer Agustí Centelles (Valencia, Spain, 1909-Barcelona, 1985).

A renowned photojournalist in the troubled pre-war period, Centelles reacted to the putsch of the Extreme Right by joining the Democratic defence effort in 1936. In 1937 he was taken on by the government propaganda office, becoming one of the great image-makers of the Republican resistance.
Like thousands of other Spaniards, he reacted to defeat in 1939 by going into exile over the Pyrenees. He was interned in the Bram refugee camp, where he continued to take photographs in spite of the extremely difficult conditions. When he decided to flee occupied France and make his way secretly back into Spain, he was forced to hide several thousand negatives in a house in Carcassonne in order to protect the identities of people who might have been recognised by Franco’s police. Forty years later, after the Caudillo’s death, Centelles returned to France and reclaimed many of his archives.

The exhibition presents 36 photographs, taken during the nine months at Bram. Most have never been seen in France.

Exhibition curated by: Miquel Berga and Manuel Cirauqui,
produced by the Virreina Centre de la Imatge de l’Institut de Cultura de l’Ajuntament de Barcelona, in collaboration with the Jeu de Paume,
with the support of the Institut Ramon Llull, Barcelona,
and the contribution of Centelles Archives, Barcelona,

Maison de l’Archéologie de Bram,
2 avenue du Razès,
11150 Bram (France)