On the release of his new culinary book entitled “Real Food”, the great English photographer was grilled at a round table animated by a Le Monde journalist and the founder of Fooding at the MK2 Quai de Loire. An encounter.
![Martin Parr, Tokyo, Japan, 1998 © Martin Parr/Magnum Photos. Real Food, Martin Parr, Phaidon (page 35) .© Martin Parr/Magnum Photos. Real Food, Martin Parr, Phaidon.](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5309059de4b0695e51417c64/1464456950145-EDZ4XS3E8QRUFNTF3409/ke17ZwdGBToddI8pDm48kOMThVQ9x2yp0W56cccQPnEUqsxRUqqbr1mOJYKfIPR7UkZTRBG6NkxChUQUS5aT-BhvlA0wF-Xl6Mm9sbU-VKpCRW4BPu10St3TBAUQYVKcQbjGPKq-TpzebPm7Zdj-qBbkKotU1Dy8EW9OWxyb4JJHU9Vu0xEJ8WM8DwNTQ1Pe/tokyo-martin_parr_des_gouts_phaidon_livre_photographe.jpg)
Martin Parr, Tokyo, Japan, 1998 © Martin Parr/Magnum Photos. Real Food, Martin Parr, Phaidon (page 35) .© Martin Parr/Magnum Photos. Real Food, Martin Parr, Phaidon.
Numéro: Why have you done a book about food?
Martin Parr: I started taking photographs of food 25 years ago. I’ve always liked that. At the time no one else was doing it because mobile telephones didn’t exist. I started because I wanted to find another angle to my documenting photos, one that was less sad. And food seemed like a perfect solution.
How did you chose the 200 shots in the book (hamburgers, kitsch cakes in the shape of little men or animals, crazy cupcakes, ice-creams, dripping hot dogs, chips, donuts, neon sushi, fatty sausages etc), from 25 years of taking photos around the world?
Cheap junk food often looks better than a 26 dish tasting menu for 400 euros in one of the best restaurants in the world. I'm a pretty snobby foodie what it comes to what I eat personally, and while I have tasted some of the dishes in the book when it comes to the photos I just chose what looks best.
For complete interview please visit Numéro.