Frank Horvat Italian, 28/04/1928-21/10/2020
Printed later.
.
24 x 36 cm / 9 1/2 x 14 1/8 in
.
Edition of 12
49 x 74 cm / 19 1/4 x 29 1/8 in
.
Frank Horvat’s “Le Sphynx, Paris, 1956” is an evocative slice of Parisian nightlife, resonant with mystery and psychological tension.
The frame presents not the typical hustle of a club crowd, but an intimate, charged triangle: a solitary man seated at a table, a dancer on stage, and another woman—perhaps a fellow performer—watching closely from the wings.
The atmosphere is hushed but electric, stripped of any extraneous detail that would otherwise diffuse its intensity.
Horvat’s lens transforms the mundane into the mythic. The man’s isolation is palpable; while a bottle of champagne on his table hints at indulgence, his posture and gaze reveal a more complex inner world—a routine visitor searching for escape or meaning. The dancer, illuminated under harsh club lights, appears almost statuesque, her body both subject and symbol. She is unaware, or perhaps indifferent, to the scrutiny of both the man and her peer, which underscores themes of performance and introspection in equal measure.
No haze of cigarette smoke blurs the tableau; instead, the composition is crisp, emphasizing the stark contrasts between flesh, fabric, and décor. Behind the figures hangs a “terrible painting,” described by Horvat himself as evocative of its era—an accidental participant in the scene’s implied narrative. Unlike staged photographs, this moment feels stolen and immediate—Horvat reportedly had only minutes inside Le Sphynx before being ushered out by club staff, making the image a rare and precious document of its time.
What makes this photograph so compelling is not only its scarcity, but Horvat’s keen psychological insight. By eschewing spectacle and focusing on these three, he renders the strip club not as a place of sensation, but as a contemplative microcosm—a stage for loneliness, anticipation, and silent connection. In this way, “Le Sphynx, Paris, 1956” becomes a haunting meditation on identity and longing in the city’s nocturnal heart.