Artist
Alice Pallot
Alice Pallot is a French photographer who lives and works in Brussels. She graduated with honors from the photography section of ENSAV La Cambre (BA and MA) In July 2018 and participated in the Erasmus program at Ecal in Switzerland. In the same year, she won the Roger de Conynck prize for her series L’Ile Himero, also exhibited at The Voies Off Festival in the context of Les Rencontres de la photographie d’Arles.
In 2019, Alice Pallot self-edited a book untitled Land which was included in Belgian Photobook at the Fotomuseum in Antwerp, Le Bal in Paris and at the Wiels Art Book Fair in Brussels. Her photographic series Oasis was included in the 4th edition of the PhotoBrussels Festival 2019 at Hangar Art Center. This body of work was also shown in collaboration with the Satellite Gallery at En Piste ! in Liège and in Dans quel monde rêvons-nous ? curated by the collectif Xeno at Bozar in Brussels. Alice Pallot’s work was included in several places in Brussels, such as Le Botanique, Gallery Été 78, Adaventura, Vertigo Gallery, La Réserve and La Vallée. She also exhibited in France; in Paris, at Immix Gallery, N’Oblige Gallery and in Dieppe at the Diep-Haven Festival.
In 2020, she presented with the Gallery Satellite a new display of L’Île Himero - accompanied with a book edited by Page Works - at the Biennale de L’Image Possible in Liège. Laureate of the PhotoBrussels Festival 05, Alice Pallot presented a new series; Suillus, part of the exhibition «The World Within» at Hangar Art Center in 2021.
In September 2021, she presented her Suillus series at the Unseen Photo Fair, Amsterdam, with Hangar Gallery. In january 2022, Suillus was presented in La Caserne and at Immix Galerie in Paris. Alice Pallot has been published in Libération, La Libre, Fisheye Magazine, Vice and others.
Suillus
In the twentieth century, the emissions from the former zinc factory in Lommel’s Sahara (Belgium) made vegetation completely disappear across several hundred hectares in Lommel, giving way to an arid landscape covered by white sand. In order to avoid the extension of the sandy plains, a new forest of conifers was planted, creating a unique nature reserve. The pines were able to survive through symbiotic coexistence with a fungi, the Suillus Bovinus. Naturally resistant to zinc, it has protected the trees and other reemerging vegetation from ecotoxicity.
Alice Pallot is fascinated by natural phenomena, metamorphoses and silent realities. Her work is immersive and the testimony of spontaneous exploration. It bears witness to the impact that humanity has on his environment today but also aspires to delicately capture the zeitgeist. The (Suillus looking at the sun with closed eyelids II) series, evokes the dark shadow of the imperceptible zinc pollution, which still lingers today in a tense relationship with a reborn nature. This series strives to highlight the contrast between the idyllic appearance of the Sahara and its underlying real toxicity. This rebirth in a regenerated, timeless space and the ensuing communion with it illustrates the hope and resilience inherent in human nature.
This series was initiated during the health crisis period of 2020. Her need for freedom, escape and wild land led her to discover this singular place. Refusing to confine herself to the idea of a disenchanted generation, these pictures tends to carry a message of possible reconstruction and hope.
The 10th edition of .tiff reflects a diversity of voices, positions, and subject matter. It is a passionate group of artists and photographers, who each try to give personal answers to today’s questions. Gülsah Ayla Bayrak and Rami Hara take their personal histories of migration and stereotypes as a starting point to explore identification, mythification, and the idea of belonging. Lived experience also guides the work of Seppe Van Craywinkel and his celebration of freedom, friendship, and spontaneity. Where Arian Christiaens explores her family’s archive, searching for her own position as photographer, daughter, mother, lover, and woman, Lars Duchateau invites viewers to link possible narratives with cryptic large format photographs, each one inspired by newspaper articles.
Elsewhere, Barbara Debeuckelaere treads a thin line between fiction and reality, delving into the Romanian fanbase of the American television series Dallas; Ligia Poplawska considers emotions, solastalgia, and climate anxiety in a changing world; and Alice Pallot shines her light on the Lommel Sahara in Belgium, rendering it alien without any post-production.
These artists work across a variety of media, encompassing books, video and installations. Their stories are as diverse as their approach: documentary, analytical, poetic, conceptual, humorous, intimate and most of all fresh and thought-provoking.
Over the years, .tiff has succeeded in building a Belgian photography community that allows for an exchange of ideas and insights between artists, curators, critics, and researchers. The current selection shows that this community is ever growing - and that Belgian photography will continue to reinvent itself for many years to come.