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1932

Place de l’Europe, Gare Saint-Lazare

Place de l’Europe Gare Saint Lazare, I932
Gare Saint-Lazare, Paris, France

Humor

Collection · 11 items

Photography

5 sub-collections · 156 items

Suspension

Collection · 1 items

time

Collection · 41 items

Related

Walking piece

Every Foot of The Sidewalk: boulevard Saint-Laurent

Every Foot of the Sidewalk photographs Montreal’s Boulevard Saint-Laurent devoid of people, revealing sidewalks as empty, almost wild spaces. The project explores absence, urban presence, and spontaneous social engagement through walking and photography.

Philippe Guillaume
Walking piece

Walking the Dog

Keith Arnatt’s Walking the Dog (1976–79) is a black-and-white photo series of owners posed with their dogs, exploring self-representation, repetition, and social behavior. The work blends conceptual art with subtle humor, questioning photography’s claim to objectivity.

Keith Arnatt
walkingevent

Rediscovering Britain with Quintin Lake

Join Quintin Lake for an illustrated discussion of his solo pilgrimage around the coast of Britain. We are delighted to welcome Quintin Lake here to Hatchards this evening for an illustrated talk on his experience of walking and photographing Britain for his book The Perimeter. On Friday 17 April 2015, photographer Quintin Lake set off

Quintin Lake
Walking piece

Seven Walks in a Holy City

Walking, playing and collecting photographs in the city of Jerusalem during October 2011.

Idit Nathan

Humor

Collection · 11 items

Photography

5 sub-collections · 156 items

Suspension

Collection · 1 items

time

Collection · 41 items

Related

Walking piece

Every Foot of The Sidewalk: boulevard Saint-Laurent

Every Foot of the Sidewalk photographs Montreal’s Boulevard Saint-Laurent devoid of people, revealing sidewalks as empty, almost wild spaces. The project explores absence, urban presence, and spontaneous social engagement through walking and photography.

Philippe Guillaume
Walking piece

Walking the Dog

Keith Arnatt’s Walking the Dog (1976–79) is a black-and-white photo series of owners posed with their dogs, exploring self-representation, repetition, and social behavior. The work blends conceptual art with subtle humor, questioning photography’s claim to objectivity.

Keith Arnatt
walkingevent

Rediscovering Britain with Quintin Lake

Join Quintin Lake for an illustrated discussion of his solo pilgrimage around the coast of Britain. We are delighted to welcome Quintin Lake here to Hatchards this evening for an illustrated talk on his experience of walking and photographing Britain for his book The Perimeter. On Friday 17 April 2015, photographer Quintin Lake set off

Quintin Lake
Walking piece

Seven Walks in a Holy City

Walking, playing and collecting photographs in the city of Jerusalem during October 2011.

Idit Nathan
Photographed in 1932 by Henri Cartier-Bresson, a man leaps over a puddle at Gare Saint-Lazare. Captured just before his heel hits the water, it illustrates the “decisive moment” with movement, reflection, and precise composition.

Photographed by Henri Cartier-Bresson in 1932, this is one of the most iconic images in the history of modern photography. The scene shows a man about to step into a large puddle behind the Saint-Lazare station in Paris. The photographer captures the exact instant before his heel touches the water — a moment suspended between action and consequence.

The image is often associated with the concept of the “decisive moment,” a term Cartier-Bresson would later use to define the precise instant when form, movement, and meaning align perfectly.

The composition is carefully structured: the reflection in the water doubles the figure, creating symmetry and visual tension. In the background, a poster of a ballerina leaping echoes the man’s gesture, adding subtle humor and an additional layer of visual commentary.

APA style reference

Cartier-Bresson, H. (1932). Place de l’Europe, Gare Saint-Lazare. walk · listen · create. https://walklistencreate.org/walkingpiece/place-de-leurope-gare-saint-lazare/
Submitted by: Dani Spadotto

meander

1. Cockney music hall song-walk ‘for me dear old Dutch’. 2. Two of us walking in an anything but straight line (me and ‘er).

Added by hilwalk
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