It’s the beginning of a new week. I flip through the newspapers and find a nice surprise in Le Monde: a report by Philippe Rémy and photographer Laurent Van Der…
Author Michel Philippot
What is said one day can be contradicted the week after, at least partially, and that makes me happy. The subject in question is the double-page spread in Marianne about…
Not once since I began writing this column have I felt as sad as I feel right now. What must be happening today so that newspapers I read—newspapers which supposedly…
The penal colony of Guiana (South America) opened in 1852. It was closed to metropolitans temporarily due to a high mortality rate in 1869, and reopened in 1887; in the…
Adam Panczuk presents two black and white series. Large format portraits staging dreamlike scenes symbolising the farmers putting down roots in their native country, then more classic report images…
After the fall of Gaddafi, the heavily armed Tuareg militia returned to Mali with the intention of reconquering Azawad, the land that they (the Tuaregs) have claimed since 1963. It…
The Léon & Levy studio operators performed a real technical feat taking pictures of the Tuareg community in the Central Sahara with a panoramic camera towards 1900. The images of…
During several visits to the Western Sahara, refusing press trips and naive propaganda, Hugues de Wurstemberger shared the everyday lives of Sahrawis for a long period of time. Since 1991,…
Teenagers are bored stiff in the south of Sweden so young people meet on the outskirts of the villages for car chase mirroring Rebel without a Cause. Big American…
The view is broad, sweeping. The space, at once immense and bounded and goes from white to deepest black, the entire spectrum of greys is present, inscribing the materials in…