Bruce Weber American, b. 29/3/1946
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Edition of 10
20 × 24 in / 50 × 60 cm
Edition of 5
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There is a moment suspended in this photograph that seems to belong less to gravity than to myth. A man — Rickson Gracie, the legendary Brazilian jiu-jitsu master — stands barefoot on the white sand of Prainha Beach, arms raised skyward, as his young son Rawkson soars above him, weightless, his body a clean diagonal line cutting through the Rio haze.
The hills rise dense and dark behind them. Below, the beach sprawls in lazy midday heat, umbrellas and strangers blurred into the distance. And yet this frame contains only them — a father and his child, playing at the edge of the world.
Bruce Weber captured this image during his celebrated road trip through Rio de Janeiro in 1986, a journey that would become the now-iconic photobook “O Rio de Janeiro: A Photographic Journal”. Published by Alfred A. Knopf that same year, the book devoted an extended series to Rickson Gracie, long before the Gracie family name would resonate beyond Brazil.
Weber saw in Rickson something elemental — a physical and spiritual authority rooted not in performance but in lived discipline. In this image, however, the warrior becomes simply a father, and the discipline becomes joy.
This is where Weber’s genius resides: in finding tenderness inside strength. Shot on gelatin silver, the black-and-white palette strips the scene of the exotic and gives it universality — this could be any beach, any father, any son. And yet it could only be Rio, 1986, with that particular light, that particular grace.