On return to France in 1944, Charbonnier worked for Théodore (Théo) Blanc (1891–1985) and Antoine (Tony) Demilly (1892–1964) in their darkrooms in Lyon, where he learnt how to print. At the end of the war he photographed, in the village of
Vienne, near
Grenoble, the execution of a
Nazi collaborator in front of a crowd of five thousand people.
Popular Photography notes that; proof of [Charbonnier's] skill early in his career is shown by his coverage of a public execution during the World War II period. He shot the entire story in only 30 frames—possibly because film was scarce then. The drama had a beginning (marching in of the firing squad), a middle (complete with coup de grace), and an end (carting away the corpse in a coffin)—all this before a large crowd of French citizens. Charbonnier's work bears the trademark of all great photojournalists- superb technique matched with an observant eye. His early work involved indoor flash with extensions, a style it was then obligatory to master. Versatile on location, he covered assignments from the Folies Bergère to the desert and Arctic." In the late 40s, he became the chief
typesetter for
Liberation, and later
France Dimanche. He also wrote for
Point de Vue, where for the first time his photographs were published, in 1949, by editor
Albert Plecy (1914-1977). In 1950, he was appointed reporter for the magazine
Réalités, specializing in stories of French everyday life, but also travelling the world for the magazine. In 1951 he was photographing the
Tuaregs in North Africa; in 1954, shoeshine boys in
Brazil; as early as 1955 he visited China and then Outer
Mongolia, where he was the first Western photographer given a licence to work; then in
Moscow during the
Cold War; as well as
Kuwait, where he made one of his best remembered pictures, of a veiled Kuwaiti woman carrying a sewing machine on her head; the former French Equatorial Africa, where he photographed
Albert Schweitzer (and his pelican) in
Gabon; and
Alaska. Charbonnier's
humanist images are 'straight', or
realist, a quality in his work was recognised with inclusion amongst Edith Gérin, Janine Niépce and
Sabine Weiss,
Marcel Bovis, René-Jacques,
Jean Dieuzaide, Jean Marquis,
Leon Herschtritt, Jean-Louis Swiners, Eric Schwab, and André Papillon in the 1992 monograph ''La photographie humaniste: 1930-1960 : histoire d'un mouvement en France
and the exhibition Humanist photography, 1945-1968
at the National Library of France from 31 October 2006 to 28 January 2007. Humanist photography, as it became known in France, though never a formal group or movement, was a post-war movement that helped build a French national identity and iconography, both its picturesque places and its social clichés, but it also denounced the harsh realities of the period; the move to the cities and growth of the urban working class, poverty, lack of housing and the fear of the Cold War. This was the style of the Rapho photo agency owned and run by Raymond Grosset (who took it over from founder Charles Rado after the war), of which Charbonnier became a member along with others of the younger generation of photojournalist, including Jean Dieuzaide, Sabine Weiss and Janine Niepce. Like his colleagues, Charbonnier identified closely with the classe populaire
and focused on the worker, as exemplified by his image Miner being washed by his wife
, 1954. One of his stories for Réalités
, published January 1955, in which he employed an objective point of view exposed conditions in a mental hospital that are a valuable document today in gauging the progress of psychiatric treatment (a number of the most powerful images were not published due to the sensitivities of the 1950s), while in 1966 another of his stories, Hélène et Jean, six heures de voyage à travers l'extase et l'angoisse
, follows the consequences of drug addiction and overdose. The book of his photographs from assignments for Réalités,
with text by writer and surrealist poet Philippe Soupault. Les Chemins de la vie,'' was published by Les éditions du Cap in 1957. Charbonnier decided to leave
Réalités in 1974 to concentrate on his Paris neighborhood of Notre-Dame de Paris and produced extended essays on that precinct. ==Commercial photography==