Diorama II
US$86.11 Leo Caillard is interested in museum presentation. As a plastic artist, he therefore questions both display models known as diorama and the means implemented by man to try to reproduce the living on the brink of disappearing. The 'Dioramas'by Caillard are trompe l’œil. The animals in the foreground very much belong to museum dioramas. The backgrounds are however assemblage of other photographic works. The artist reintegrates them as the real ecosystems of depicted species. The photographer also questions the need for reconstruction. Like an admission of failure, man recreates an artificial nature that he knows doomed to extinction. Between reality and fiction, time is suspended in a structure like Noah’s Ark. The presentation in diorama form confuses members of the public who no longer know if they are at a show or watching the tragic staging of an ineluctable drama.**The artist: Leo Caillard**Leo Caillard has practised photography since the age of 16. It was therefore a very natural choice for him to make it his profession. On leaving Gobelins (School of the Image) in 2008, he became a freelance photographer at barely 23 years old. He spent the following year in New York. He chose to complete his training there as an assistant to other photographers. This journey also allowed him to develop personal work that he conceived as a series. Retouching and montage quickly imposed as his medium of photography: ‘I like to create images at the edge of reality, with a play on pretence.
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Diorama I
US$86.11 Leo Caillard is interested in museum presentation. As a plastic artist, he therefore questions both display models known as diorama and the means implemented by man to try to reproduce the living on the brink of disappearing. The 'Dioramas'by Caillard are trompe l’œil. The animals in the foreground very much belong to museum dioramas. The backgrounds are however assemblage...
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Diorama III
US$86.10 Leo Caillard is interested in museum presentation. As a plastic artist, he therefore questions both display models known as diorama and the means implemented by man to try to reproduce the living on the brink of disappearing. The 'Dioramas'by Caillard are trompe l’œil. The animals in the foreground very much belong to museum dioramas. The backgrounds are however assemblage...
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Desert II
US$86.10 With the most hostile climates in the world, part of the territory is colonised by deserts. These sterile zones which are not favourable to life have however always been travelled across by man. Depending on the latitude, the activity in these expanses, Ã priori hostile, is not the same. Leo Caillard visited the American West, to the Mojave Desert,...
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Windrocks
US$80.79 Sarolta Ban, born in Budapest in 1982, started her career as a jewellery designer. She discovered digital photography with its endless post-production opportunities for manipulation. In reference to her work method, she explains: ‘I don’t think I am a photographer, I just like creating images.’ The time required to produce a final work varies between several hours and several...
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Cloudladder
US$80.79 Sarolta Ban, born in Budapest in 1982, started her career as a jewellery designer. She discovered digital photography with its endless post-production opportunities for manipulation. In reference to her work method, she explains: ‘I don’t think I am a photographer, I just like creating images.’ The time required to produce a final work varies between several hours and several...
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BOUZKACHI À KABOUL
US$80.79 Afghanistan, Kabul, March 2005. Buzkashi is a national sport for the Afghans, a sort of rugby on horseback where the ball is the decapitated carcass of a goat or a calf. This sport, of Mongolian origin, dates back to Genghis Khan and is considered an ancestor of polo. Originally, Mongolians used their enemy’s head as a ball. For the...
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Arriver avant la nuit
US$80.79 Afghanistan, Bamiyan Valley, April 2004. Situated 230 km North West of Kabul and at about 2500m altitude on the Silk Route linking China to India, the Bamiyan Valley is populated by the Hazaras, Afghanistan’s only Shiite people. It is known for the famous Buddhas of Bamiyan, carved from the cliff around the fifth century, and recently destroyed by the...
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PROPINQUITY HONG KONG I
US$86.10 This work comes from a photographic series entirely devoted to the architectural landscape of Hong Kong. Sensitive to the urban environment and its living areas, the photographer focused on the mass of skyscrapers that continue to spring up, in order to accommodate the city?s millions of residents. Often cold and impersonal in appearance, these great towers are now part...
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RED ROAD V
US$86.10 This series of photographs documents the failure of a social engineering experiment, stemming from a post-war rehousing plan designed for the residents of overpopulated slums. Inspired by Le Corbusier?s architecture, the 8 large blocks of the residential plan for a major complex nicknamed Red Road in Glasgow, were completed in the mid-sixties. With a capacity of 4700 people, they...
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PROPINQUITY HONG KONG V
US$86.11 This work comes from a photographic series entirely devoted to the architectural landscape of Hong Kong. Sensitive to the urban environment and its living areas, the photographer focused on the mass of skyscrapers that continue to spring up, in order to accommodate the city?s millions of residents. Often cold and impersonal in appearance, these great towers are now part...
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PROPINQUITY HONG KONG IV
US$86.10 This work comes from a photographic series entirely devoted to the architectural landscape of Hong Kong. Sensitive to the urban environment and its living areas, the photographer focused on the mass of skyscrapers that continue to spring up, in order to accommodate the city?s millions of residents. Often cold and impersonal in appearance, these great towers are now part...
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RED ROAD III
US$86.11 This series of photographs documents the failure of a social engineering experiment, stemming from a post-war rehousing plan designed for the residents of overpopulated slums. Inspired by Le Corbusier?s architecture, the 8 large blocks of the residential plan for a major complex nicknamed Red Road in Glasgow, were completed in the mid-sixties. With a capacity of 4700 people, they...
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