
© Didier Lefévre. All Illustrations by Emmanuel Guibert
Artist Emmanuel Guibert used illustrations and photographs to tell the story of Didier Lefèvre's work in Afghanistan.
Despite this esthetic antipathy, however, Guibert's graphic illustrations blend peacefully and seamlessly with the black-and-white photographs taken by his late friend Didier Lefèvre in The Photographer (First Second Books, 2009), a deeply compelling narrative in words, drawings and photographs. The book, a 278-page graphic memoir, describes Lefèvre's first mission to Afghanistan for Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) in 1986, during the Soviet occupation of the country.
"It's a project of discovery," says Guibert of The Photographer. "It's about a man discovering his own job. We always see the fruits of reporting, but we never see a reporter doing his job."
Guibert first met his Paris neighbor Lefèvre in 1968, when he was 14 and the photographer 21. "Around 1999," recalls Guibert, "I decided I was at risk of missing an important friendship in my life if I didn't get closer to this man, so we began to have a meal a month to exchange news."
During one of those meals, Guibert prevailed upon Lefèvre to show him some of his photographs. Guibert was enthralled by Lefèvre's work in Afghanistan and by his tale of traveling to that wild and war-torn country. The idea for The Photographer was born when he saw Lefèvre's contact sheets.
"It was my first time to look at contact sheets with the photographs side-by-side," Guibert says. "A contact sheet is a wordless story. It is a graphic story."
Guibert, by then a successful comic book artist and the creator of Alan's War (Dupuis, 2003; First Second Books, 2008), a graphic documentary about the World War II experiences of an American friend, prevailed upon Lefèvre to loan him all 4,000 of his Afghan photographs, only six of which had previously been published. He did not, however, simply make drawings based on the photographs.
"My drawings are between the photographs," explains Guibert. "My job was to fill in the blanks. Each time I see a photograph, I always wonder what happened before and what happened next."




























