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Photographer donates works to Swiss museum

A huge trove of photographs taken over half a century by Switzerland's René Burri, known for his iconic portrait of cigar-smoking revolutionary Che Guevara, is to be donated to a museum in Lausanne, officials said on Monday.

Photographer donates works to Swiss museum
René Burri at the proposed future new home of the Elysée Museum next to Lausanne's train station. Photo: Elysée Museum/ARC

The Elysée Museum, a temple for photography buffs from around the globe, said it would become the long-term home for an estimated 30,000 of Burri's works.
   
"René Burri has been present wherever history plays out, and, with acumen, 
has borne witness to the defining moments of his time," the museum said in a statement.
   
Burri, now 80, has been a member of the renowned Paris-based photography 
agency Magnum since 1959.
   
His famous works include his 1963 portrait of Che Guevara, which among 
iconic photos comes just a hair's breath behind Cuban Alberto Korda's 1960 picture of the revolutionary.
   
Burri is also known for his photographs of artist Pablo Picasso,  architect 
Le Corbusier, and his reportages on Brazilian megacities, as well as coverage of conflicts in the Middle East and Vietnam.
   
"We won't necessarily have all of René Burri's photographs, but we will 
have the major part," Swiss news agency ATS quoted the museum's director Sam Stourdze as saying.
   
Burri, meanwhile, said creating an archive at the Elysée Museum would 
finally help bring some order to his huge collection and preserve his work.
   
"What can I do with thousands upon thousands of photographs that have built 
up since the 1950s?" he said, according to ATS.

"I find them in every nook and cranny," he said.

"Today, I'm going to spend some time identifying what I've amassed over 50 years." 
 

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EMPLOYMENT

Hear ye, here ye! This Swiss city is looking for a town crier

Can you carry a tune? Are you a night owl? If so, this job posting in Switzerland may be up right up your (cobblestone) alley. Here’s how you can submit an application for this… very high position.

Hear ye, here ye! This Swiss city is looking for a town crier
The hat and coat are optional for the job. Photo by Lausanne Tourisme

As far as unusual employment opportunities go, this one from Lausanne is — quite literally — tops.

The city, which employs one of Europe’s last remaining town criers, is looking for people to fill this position on part-time basis.

What’s a town crier?

In Lausanne’s case, it is a person who announces the hours every night between 10 pm and 2 am from the bell tower of the city’s imposing Gothic cathedral, a landmark overlooking the roofs of the picturesque Old Town.

The workplace: Lausanne Cathedral. Photo by Lausanne Tourisme

The person who will assume this position will continue a tradition that this city in the canton of Vaud has cherished since 1405.

These are the requirements for the job:

  • To watch over the city each night
  • Announce each hour on the hour between 10pm and 2am in a melodious voice (in French, but knowledge of foreign languages is a plus)
  • Be able to climb 53 stone steps to the cathedral’s bell tower
  • Not have a criminal record
  • No falling asleep on the job
  • Have a business apprenticeship certificate (we are not sure why)

This is 365-days-a-year job, but the new hire will share the position with other criers.

Interested? This is how you can apply.

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