“Ossoue” – this is the name of one of the largest glaciers in the Pyrenees, located in the Vignemale massif, on the northern slope of the French-Spanish border. It is also the name chosen by French photographer Grégoire Eloy for his project that documents the imminent and inexorable disappearance of this majestic ice giant.
This fall, we will be presenting the work of Chieko Shiraishi, a Japanese photographer born in 1968 in Yokosuka, Japan. A true virtuoso of silver halide printing, she uses the technique to better enhance her images.
From the tumultuous practical work of the artist Armand Brac, a vocabulary of his own is born, mixed with rugged, fractured forms, landscapes of stains and erasures, bare marks and unfinished lines.
"Meanwhile" is a photographic correspondence between art direction students at the Penninghen School in France and Japanese students at theKyoto University of the Arts, Japan. These photographs were taken during the very first lockdown
We invite you to discover our new exhibition More Than What We See, which we present in collaboration with Farago Project Paris. Recent years have marked an evolution in our society of beauty criteria, ideal genders and the representation of diversity.
This exhibition marks the culmination of the sixth edition of the Life Framer Award for Photography. It features contemporary photographs by 24 photographers, each selected by world-renowned judges.
5 photographers: Achim Duchow, Irina Ionesco, Chloé Jafé, Akimitsu Takagi and Hitomi Watanabe, reveal to us in turn different facets of those who ink them and those who wear them.
The Catalan Toni Catany (1942 – 2013) developed and perfected his artistic singularity in the 1980s by merging his emotions and enchantments with the subtle language of flowers.
In collaboration with the collective Foto Femme United (FFU). A competition and exhibition on the theme of censorship in the media, open to binary, non-binary, cisgender and transgender people.
Carte blanche to the young Ukrainian artist Nikita Sereda. Through his exhibition Flowers , the artist transcribes what living in Ukraine today is like; a mixture of religion, desolation and hope.