"Bleka damen i Barcelona", 1959
Signed CHR Strömholm and dated Nov 1983 on verso. With Christer Strömholm's copyright stamp on verso. Gelatin silver print, image 28 x 20.8 cm. Sheet, 39.8 x 30.3 cm.
Anders Jonason and Christer Strömholm, "Konsten att vara där", 1991, illustrated p. 139.
Lourdes Peracaula (ed.), "Christer Strömholm", 2001, illustrated p. 27.
Joakim & Jakob Strömholm (e.a), "Christer Strömholm 1918-2002, On verra bien", 2002, illustrated on full page p. 103.
Brigitte Govignon (e.a), “La Petite Encyclopédie de la Photographie”, 2011, illustrated on the cover.
Joakim Strömholm (ed.), "Post Scriptum Christer Strömholm", 2012, illustrated on full page p. 217.
What interested Christer Strömholm the most was studying our true human identity. His documentary photographs from the project in Paris in the 1950s, “Vännerna på Place Blanche” are legendary today. Equally as well known as his suite of friends at the Moulin Rouge and the nightclubs round Place Blanche is the image of the carefully made-up woman known as “Bleka Damen”. Taking photographs was, for Christer Strömholm, a sacred obligation. He did not work with commercial assignments but undertook casual jobs as a press photographer, bartender, and tour guide in order to support himself and pay for laboratory work. It was on a trip to Barcelona that the famous photograph of the pale woman was taken at an afternoon brothel in a pause between the guided tours. “Bleka Damen i Barcelona” has been shown at MoMA in New York together with other world-famous historical photographers. The image also appeared on the cover of the most recent edition (2011) of “La Petite Encyclopédie de la Photographie” which contains articles on the 220 leading photographers in the history of photography.