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Christophe Gin, Laureate of the

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As part of the 2015 Visa pour l’Image festival in Perpignan, the Fondation Carmignac has announced that the 6 th edition of the Carmignac photojournalism Award will be awarded to Christophe Gin, in recognition of his work on the theme of  ‘Lawless areas in France’.

The Fondation Carmignac aims to support and promote works of  investigative photojournalism documenting areas often underrepresented  in mainstream news coverage. This year’s edition of the Award focuses  specifically on parts of France that have become so-called ‘lawless areas’  (zones de non-droit): places where political, judicial and socioeconomic  structures divert from those idealised by the French Republic, and where its  legal system no longer holds sway.

In response to the foundation’s chosen theme, French photographer Christophe Gin (born in 1965) offered a collection of images delving deep  into the territory of French Guiana, an area he has been exploring since 2001. His work documents a series of highly hermetic societies, existing in  unique enclaves and governed by their own systems of social codes and  laws. This vast natural landscape is the largest French region (equal to 1/6 th of the surface area of mainland France), and is bound by river borders linking the area to neighboring Brazil and Suriname.

Outside the administrative control of the Atlantic coastal towns of  Cayenne, Kourou and Saint-Laurent du Maroni, the inland regions of French Guiana only became an official part of the region in 1969. Made up entirely of tropical forests and remote villages cut off from the outside world, this  untameable area has since encountered significant difficulties in terms of its relation to mainland France and its development, as unemployment and lack of access to education have led to high levels of disaffection and  alcoholism among the indigenous population.

French Guiana has been associated with gold prospecting since the mid-19th century, and in the 1990s the region became part of the new global “gold road”. – as market prices rose, the region began to experience serious social and economic imbalance, accompanied by a rise in illegal goldpanning. Poverty amongst the local population and the exploitation of the natural landscape have led to levels of criminality and violence that  are amongst the highest in France, as well as significant sanitary risks both  for the human population and the surrounding environment. Today, these Latin American regions have become something of a European “El  Dorado” operating outside the legal confines of the French state.

Christophe Gin spent five months exploring the landscapes of Guiana, from  border regions to the most remote Amerindian villages, where soldiers  mingle with gold prospectors and exploited immigrant workers, and where  local population is forced to integrate republican concepts. His photography bears witness to the reality of life in a land full of  contrasts, far from the caricatures often presented through the mainstream press.

Christophe Gin’s photo report from Guiana will be on display as part  of the Colonie (Colony) exhibition, to be held in the Chapelle des Beaux-Arts  in Paris from 5 November to 5 December 2015. A book will also be published as part of the Award.

The jury of the 6th edition of the Carmignac photojournalism Award was composed of
• Nicolas Bourriaud, Art Critic, former Director of the École Nationale  Supérieure des Beaux-Arts de Paris
• Patrick Chauvel, Photojournalist
• Éric Chol, President and Editor of Courrier International
• Nigel Hurst, Director of the Saatchi Gallery, London
• Marie Sumalla, Photo Editor at Le Monde

http://www.christophegin.com
http://www.fondation-carmignac.com

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