Wildly prolific, the late French writer was driven, compulsive, and rarely satisfied—and his own little-known photographs remain as elusive as ever.
In a psychologically-charged series, Rebecca Topakian reconstructs her dual identity from object-clues, collecting traces of herself in virtual and physical geographies.
For the past ten years, the photographer has wandered the streets of Belleville, creating quiet images that reflect on a city that both changes and doesn’t.
In a new photobook, Bourouissa returns to his signature series “Périphérique,” a critique of French culture and the politics of representation.
Sabine Weiss’s photographs brought style and serendipity to the streets of Paris and beyond.
In France, photographer Alessandra Sanguinetti injects elements of fairy tales and fantasy into quotidian scenes.
In a retrospective at LE BAL in Paris, Gerard Petrus Fieret’s subversive images reveal the libertine atmosphere of 1960s Europe.
Joanna Fiduccia considers the uses of aerial photography in her review of Jeanne Haffner’s The View from Above.