Jean-Philippe Bernigaud

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Jean-Philippe Bernigaud (pseudonym: Jean-Philippe Talbo ; born November 8, 1932 ; † March 6, 2017 ) was a French publisher and artist.

He was a founding member of the Éditions Maspero publishing house in Paris and a companion and friend of François Maspero . Bernigaud completed his two-year military service in Algeria , where he opposed the French occupation. He made himself unpopular in political circles through his publications of atrocities from the war and the anti-colonial demonstrations of the population. He also organized the distribution of books banned by the Algerian state and, after the Algerian War, was able to build up a large distribution network for the publisher Éditions Maspero through the large number of his contacts . In the later years of his life he worked as a freelance artist, he mainly created paintings and abstract clay sculptures. He had two sons, the journalist Jean-François Paul-Louis Bernigaud (1962-1995) and Nicolas Eric Bernigaud (1967-1995). He was married to the German teacher Anne Bernigaud. In the Bibliotèque Nationale de France he is listed as Jean-Philippe Talbo.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ "Rouleau compresseur" in Petite Kabylie. In: Cairn.info. Retrieved June 23, 2019 (French).
  2. ^ Jean-Philippe Talbo (1932-2017). Retrieved June 23, 2019 .