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Thomas Boivin: The Art of Hand-held Camera

Thomas Boivin: The Art of Hand-held Camera

EXHIBITION + BOOK

Thomas Boivin: The Art of Hand-held Camera

In his “true” second book, Belleville, Boivin homes in on a territory that is familiar to him, without trying to comment on it socially or even intellectually. Pure joy.

By Brigitte Ollier

EXHIBITION

Tender Portraits of Black Girls Coming of Age

A new exhibition brings together the work of over 85 Black women, girls, and genderqueer artists to radically reimagine our world through their gaze.

By Miss Rosen

EXHIBITION

Lanes About to Disappear

In 1870 Thomas Annan was tasked with photographing a dedalus of unsanitary alleyways inhabited by the working class in Glasgow, before their demolition. 

Photographs by Thomas Annan, courtesy of Musée D’Orsay 

BOOK

No Origin, no End

Photographer Dimitra Dede fuses together the human body and natural elements in a book that evokes the primordial, fluid matter that everything we know comes from.

Photographs by Dimitra Dede

STILL AVAILABLE IN OUR LAB SECTION

PORTRAIT

Gaia Squarci: “Opening a Door to the Experience of Others”

Gaia Squarci is contributor to major publications such as The New York Times, the New Yorker, or The Guardian, and produces both photographs for the press and personal projects with always the same goal: tell a story that hasn’t been told. In this interview, she tells us her approach to documentary photography and its importance in our society.

By Jonas Cuénin

DOCUMENTARY FILM 

Joakim Eskildsen, Nothing Special

Joakim Eskildsen is a Danish documentary photographer praised for his work on the Roma people and poverty in the United States. After traveling the world to document the stories and the lives of others, Joakim is now telling his own story and that of the people around him in this 38-minutes film. By Meero Studio

FROM THE ARCHIVES

Jean Dieuzaide: Beyond the Visible

Jean Dieuzaide would have been one hundred years old this year. The Toulouse City Hall, in France, which was entrusted with much of the artist’s collections at his death in 2003, celebrates this anniversary with a retrospective. Curated and edited by the historian of photography Françoise Denoyelle, an exhibition and a book publication take us on a journey through 60 years of photography with more than 200 works and documents, many published for the first time.

By Sophie Bernard

Blind financially supports the production of visual stories and invites all photographers to submit their portfolios.

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