This series tells the story of rural exodus, an epic tale that is at once personal and universal. Having explored his native Anatolia in the series Homeland, Serkan Taycan…
Author Laurence Cornet
After a turbulent year spent covering uprisings in the Middle East, Mathias Depardon traveled to the Black Sea to reconnect with a more lyrical strain of photography. The poetry…
The collection of four hundred vintage prints from the 1960s — taken by Dennis Hopper and recently rediscovered — documents the social, political, and creative highlights from a tumultuous era.…
Published by Le Bec en l’Air ten years after its completion, Steeve Iuncker’s Jeudi 15 h has just received the Prix Nicolas Bouvier. This is a harsh, head-on photo essay…
In a thick, illustrated book, Matthieu and Mareile Paley tell the story of their discovery of the Pamir, an isolated region of northeastern Afghanistan, made virtually inaccessible due by rugged…
For Edmund Clark, incarceration in any given country is a reflection of its culture. It provides social, political, economic and historical clues to the nation’s identity. In the case of…
Ed Kashi traveled to Madagascar to study the consequences of the depletion of natural resources on a culture dependent upon them. Using an explicit visual language, Kashi defines man by…
Developed in collaboration with Le Bal (Paris) and Ivorypress (Madrid), which presented the exhibition earlier in 2012, The Latin American Photobook takes viewers through the history of publishing in Latin…
By bringing together two series by Bruce Davidson taken fifteen years apart—one in New York’s Central Park in the early 1990s, the other in the gardens of Paris in 2005-2006—the…
Gilles Verneret, director of Bleu du Ciel, took full advantage of his new exhibition space to explore two works whose languages, at first sight quite different, correspond to each other…