LIKE Magazine celebrates 5 years of existance with a new issue!
Cold peoples in danger
A photographic account by Natalya Saprunova. When the peoples of the cold are at the forefront of climate change
Through her reports, Natalya Saprunova gives a voice to the indigenous peoples of the polar regions and highlights the climate upheavals that are reshaping territories and threatening the planet. She captures the very essence of the peoples of the cold whom she photographs, using a rigorous journalistic approach. As an attentive observer, she reminds us of what is happening in the Arctic.
And 1 and 2 and 3, photo! The great Brazilian Portfolio
The Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF) has been interested in Brazilian photography for several decades. A process that began in the 19th century. Today, this collection continues to grow thanks to donations and special sponsorship. Discover photos by Tanara Stuermer, Giovana S Nunes and Marcos Prado.
Pierre Liebaert’s carnival demons
Beyond the confetti and festive parades, carnival embodies a crisis, a moment of rupture necessary for the reaffirmation of the collective. This ancestral rite, often perceived as a joyful and noisy outlet, actually has a deeper dimension, oscillating between transgression and rebirth. Pierre Liebaert travels all over Europe throughout the year to photograph these living rites from distant times.
Tribute to Jean-Claude Deutsch The gentleman photographer
He was one of those people who lived through fashion without ever going out of fashion. Jean-Claude Deutsch, a key figure at Paris Match, left an indelible mark on the world of photography. Discreet, classy, always dressed to the nines, he combined elegance with determination. His son Ilan has taken up the torch.
Artificial intelligence according to Serge Tisseron
A psychiatrist, psychoanalyst and researcher, Serge Tisseron is one of the leading figures in the field of images and their psychological effects. For several decades now, he has been exploring the links between photography and memory. His latest book, Le jour où j’ai tué mon frère (The Day I Killed My Brother), extends this quest, combining intimate analysis with theoretical reflection on the power of images.
Jean-Claude Coutausse’s journey
He has travelled through conflicts, surveyed theatres of war and captured history through his lens. Twenty-five years after covering the siege of the Bosnian capital, he took to the streets of the city in a half-marathon, unexpectedly reconnecting with a past he thought he had left behind. It was a way for him to reconnect with a city that has shaped his career and his life.
The Paris of Agnès Varda
Immerse yourself in the courtyard studio on rue Daguerre, where Agnès Varda lived and worked from 1951 to 2019. It was at once a shooting studio, a development and printing laboratory, and the site of her first solo exhibition in 1954. A joyful mix of genres.
William Dupuy’s report
Did you know that millions of people go through life without a legal existence? Undocumented immigrants who have not crossed the Mediterranean but whose lives are weighed down by the absence of a civil declaration… They live at home like illegal immigrants. Dupuy has collected the words.
In the footsteps of the Furan, Pierre Suchet’s major investigation
A river follows a tortuous and contradictory course, originating at an altitude of 1,160 metres in the Monts du Pilat, winding its way for 36 kilometres before emptying into the Loire at Andrézieux-Bouthéon downstream of Saint-Etienne. But more than just a stream, the Furan is a living witness to the history of this urban area. Suchet followed its course.
The art of the true portrait by Ophélie Loubat
For Ophélie Loubat, a photograph isn’t something you take yourself: it’s something you build up in a relationship, by trying to capture what you experience. Her work is on display, but above all it tells a story: fragments of life captured with the rigour of an investigator and the sensitivity of a committed photographer.
A breath of fresh air
Gilles Mora’s mood. The angry column.
Exhibitions and reviews
A major section devoted to books. And always Natalie Amargier’s Concordance des temps and Marc Pussemier’s editorial favourites.
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Revue Like
Paris, France
May 21, 2025 to June 30, 2025














