Happy ! - Bernard Rubinstein Zoom

Happy !

Bernard Rubinstein

30x45
cm
50x75
cm
60x90
cm
80x120
cm
100x150
cm
Fine Art print
Baryta Hahnemühle 315g
Alu mounted print
Hanging bars
Shadow
Gap Frame
Black/White/Oak wood
Acrylic print
Aluminium brace
Starting

75,00 €

LocationPointe à Pitre
Prints issueLIMITED EDITION 30 prints ONLY
Shooting date20 novembre 1994
Original pictureSlide
FormatsPortrait orientation
Era1980-2000
ColorsYellow
CollectionCelebs
Bernard Rubinstein
Bernard Rubinstein

In the world of race and sailing, he is Rubi. A nickname he owes to Olivier de Kersauson, his shift companion of the first round the world race aboard Pen Duick VI in 1973. On his return, he changed course and took the opportunity to redouble its Cape Horn on Neptune in 1977. Long gone are the maths.

Prof. left teaching to start a nautical journalist activity. In 40 years of reporting, Bernard Rubinstein touches everything to satisfy his passion: the sea and the boats. Racing or cruising, he first tries them in Neptune Nautisme, Neptune Yachting and Voile Magazine. This is a pretext to sail close with the greatest sailors, from Alain Colas to Eric Tabarly, from Loïck Peyron to Armel Le Cleach through Franck Cammas. To face storms, he spends long periods on the Abeille Flandre and then its successor the tug Abeille Bourbon. Enthusiast about lighthouses, his collection on the subject is unique in France.

Besides, this is the time when these sea sentries were still occupied by guards that he landed on all lighthouses of the Iroise sea with a bonus of an eight days stay in the lighthouse of kings, Cordouan. Today, he can claim in all modesty to have lived since 1976, all departures of Transat, those of Rum and of the Vendée Globe. To have written and photographed hundreds of boats. It would be mistaken to think he could draw a certain vainglory from all that. He is Rubi, just Rubi.

A few miles from Pointe à Pitre, Laurent Bourgnon knows that his victory in the fifth edition of the Route du Rhum can not escape. In November 1994, aboard his trimaran Primagaz, he has signed a perfect crossing of the Atlantic in a new record time, 14 days and 6 hours. Perched on its carbon bowsprit, hanging from his gennaker furler, Laurent plays the tightrope. His very personal way to express his insolent happiness, at only 28 years old.

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Happy ! - Bernard Rubinstein

Happy ! - Bernard Rubinstein

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