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Podcast: Photography that repairs, photography that cares
08 March 2021
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The Union des Photographes Professionnels invites you to interview three photographers who share a vision and a body of work that questions human rights and, in particular, violence against women.
Louise Oligny talks about her long residency with the Maison des Femmes de Saint Denis, while Lizzie Sadin tells us about "Le Piège", which depicts the trafficking of women in Nepal.Aglaé Bory talks about her series "L'odyssée" with asylum seekers in Le Havre.
Louise Oligny talks about her long residency with the Maison des Femmes de Saint Denis, while Lizzie Sadin tells us about "Le Piège", which depicts the trafficking of women in Nepal.Aglaé Bory talks about her series "L'odyssée" with asylum seekers in Le Havre.
Beyond the document, can photography repair or heal? And if so, how?
The podcast is accompanied by photos to be discovered at the same time as the interviews.
Enjoy: https: //www.youtube.com/watch?v=sl_4XFUFGtA
UPP-Podcast-A photography that repairs. Interviews with photographers Louise Oligny, Lizzie Sadin and Aglaé Bory from UPP photographes on Vimeo.
Louise Oligny
"Canadian, born in 1963, I've been living in France since 1989, where I work as a photographer/reporter. I have been published in numerous magazines: Le Point, Le Monde 2, VSD, Elle, Libération, l'Express, Géo, Médiapart etc. I also work on numerous artistic projects involving photography, video and music.I'm currently in residence at the Maison des Femmes in Saint-Denis, where I'm collaborating with designer Clémentine du Pontavice on photo and drawing workshops, and working with Banlieues Bleues as part of their cultural initiatives.
website : http://louiseoligny.com
Lizzie Saddin
"Lizzie Sadin, you are a photojournalist. Self-taught, you decided to become a photographer in 1992. Before that, you worked as an educator, animator and trainer for disadvantaged people for ten years. In the early days, you worked with the Rapho agency, then the Éditing agency, and today you are distributed by Polaris New York. Your reports are in-depth, often focusing on human rights, violence against women and children, and political and religious extremism. You collaborate with most French and foreign magazines. You have received numerous awards, including the 1998 Care International Prize for Humanitarian Reporting, the 2007 Visa d'or magazine award at the Visa pour l'image festival, the 2010 Pierre and Alexandra Boulat Award and the 2017 Carmignac Photojournalism Prize. You regularly collaborate with humanitarian organizations such as Human Rights Watch, Unicef, Terre des hommes and Médecins du Monde".
website : https://www.lizziesadin.com
Aglaé Bory
"After studying art at the University of Aix-en-Provence and the National School of Photography in Arles, you moved to Paris 20 years ago. Your photographic work is somewhere between documentary and fiction, focusing on the human figure through portraiture, self-portraiture and human landscapes. Your photography is a mirror image that questions our humanity. Your series are often conversations between figures and places. Your work has been presented at numerous festivals and won several awards. You were part of the Corpus of "France territoires liquides" in 2013. In 2019, you are one of the photographers selected for the CNAP commission, "Flux, une société en mouvement" with your project "Figures mobiles". Winner 2020 of the Caritas Photo sociale prize, with your series produced in Le Havre in 2018. You are currently in residence in Brittany. The La Gacilly photo festival association has developed a residency on the theme of "Rurality", of which you are the first winner with your project "Les horizons, cartographie des possibles".
website:https://www.aglaebory.com



Louise Oligny by © Patrick Artinian, Aglaé Bory by ©Jean François Robert and Lizzie Sadin by © Corinne Bourbotte
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