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The

Artist

Pauline Hisbacq

Lives and Works in

Pauline Hisbacq was born in 1980.

After a master's degree in philosophy, she joined the ENSP in Arles, from which she graduated in 2011. She continued the same year with a post-graduate degree at the ICP in New York.

Since then, her work has been presented at the Rencontres de la Jeune photographie Internationale de Niort (2014), at the Ecureuil Foundation for Contemporary Art in Toulouse (2019), at the Image Satellite in Nice (2018), at the friche belle de Mai in Marseille (2017), and in Paris at Jeune Création (2013), at the Photo Paris Saint Germain festival (2017), at the Bal (2019), at the Rouen Normandie Photographic Center (2021).

She published Natalya at 7 Editions (2016), Le feu at September books (2017), Amour adolescente (chants d'amour) at Rayon Vert . édition (2019), Cadavre Exquis, fanzine co-published by Le Bal Books and September Books (2021), Songs for women and birds at September books (2021).

In 2017, she was awarded the CNAP's Soutien à la photographie documentaire contemporaine grant for the project La fête et les cendres. In 2021, she received the Aide Idividuelle à la Création from the Drac Ile de France for the project Rimorso. She is also the winner of the national commission Les Regards du Grand Paris initiated by the CNAP and the Ateliers Médicis, with the project Pastorale.

She is currently a photographer at the Rodin Museum, and editor at September Books.

Projects

Songs for women and birds

Pauline Hisbacq's work, in photography or through the manipulation of archival images (collages, montage), evokes in a poetic way the questions of youth, desire, rites of passage and resistance. She looks for feelings in forms and figures. She explores today what links the intimate and the political, the myth and the contemporary.

The project Songs for women and birds is a set of collages elaborated from the archive images of the Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp (1981-2000). Here, ordinary women fought peacefully, in single gender, against the installation of nuclear missiles by the United States, right here in England, which contributed to maintaining the terror of the Cold War. They used to sing in resistance to the police, and more generally to the world of domination, for the preservation of future generations, the hope of peace, the protection of humanity, and the respect of nature.

The collages focus on the way in which women inscribe their bodies in a gesture of struggle at the antipodes of the current manifestations. The first stake to communicate their revolt was to be always peaceful, even in front of the police repression. It was thus necessary to weld the bodies, in the tenderness, to make front vis-a-vis the domination which they denounced and which attacked them.

Scissor cuts are made on the archival images of the struggle, to show the body language specific to the women of Greenham.

Pauline Hisbacq
was nominated by
Centre photographique Rouen Normandie
in
2022
Show all projects
Each year every member of the FUTURES European Photography Platform nominates a set of artists and projects to become part of the FUTURES network.

Anaïs Boileau, whose activity is divided between work for the international press and personal work, was assiduously engaged during the confinement in plastic experiments. The resulting photographs are a kind of palimpsest of her photography, striking a subtle balance between the documentary aspect of her practice and her undiminished appetite for shapes, colours, materials and their interactions. Deploying her studio outdoors, she places everyday objects and materials within the frame of her photography, which she then brings to life, sometimes seeking harmony, sometimes dissonance. Sometimes, she supports the pictoriality by introducing paint, blurring a little more this play of surfaces. What is then printed on the skin of the image is as much the result of her gesture of composition as the effect of the indelible imprint of the Mediterranean sun, the primary subject of all her photography.

Nolwenn Brod's practice does not play with formal experimentation in its current sense, no overflow towards sculpture, painting or any other way out. It is a mining photography, which digs into its subject, in the duration, in the thickness of the blacks of the photographic image. As the projects follow one another, we observe the photographer in search of her relationship with the other, a journey for which photography is both the witness and the vehicle. The elsewhere of the residency, the exogenous anchoring point that it embodies, constitutes her privileged mode of operation. Recently in Beirut, Lebanon, in Lodz, Poland, or more recently in Brest, France, she slowly enters into a relationship, according to the encounters, which soon take shape in photographs, in the depths of the being and its contrary movements, between vulnerability and strength, fragility and affirmation. To the portraits, she adds fragments of bodies, details, nocturnal landscapes in the half-light, fragmented interiors, like so many points of this delicate cartography of the elsewhere that constitutes the other. The work is done in the length of the relationship and soon also in that of the filmic space which she decides to invest fully for her latest project Les hautes solitudes

Pauline Hisbacq's images take their place in the great white of the page; frail presences, in appearance. 

Whether she is the author of the photographs, as in many of her projects, or whether she makes use of archival images gleaned from the Internet, she applies the same gesture: she samples, deliberately focusing on the fragment. By its very nature, the photographic image is framed in a way that does not hide the hand's gesture or its imperfections. The fragment is then placed on a single sheet of paper, often in correspondence with another composition, in the pages of a book (the editorial form is dear to the artist) or on the exhibition wall. Recently, Pauline Hisbacq shared her Songs for Women and Birds, a series of collages tracing her reading of the first large-scale feminist and environmentalist movement that took place in Great Britain in the early 1980s. From the archive images, she retains those in which gestures of solidarity are prominent and deliberately avoids explicit illustrations of repression and violence, only a few framed primers surreptitiously recalling them. The interplay of hands, the interlacing of arms, the embraces call for our full attention. In this space of the sheet, Pauline Hisbacq then takes us, as she was able to search for the image among the flow of the Internet, to make our own way towards the image, towards the history of the relationships of sorority and mixed power that unfold there, and to listen to the voices, songs and cries of which this large white space is an echo. The murmur of the image, with its discreet hold on the page, and the modesty of the tool, photocopy and scissors, make a great noise in her work and are enough in themselves to open up a new mode of narration. 

Coline Jourdan recently undertook a residency in the South of France, in a project that is both documentary and visual - Raising the Dust - which explores an old arsenic mine and the visible and invisible impacts of the pollution caused by its exploitation. The photographer had already expressed her desire to image the natural landscape altered by human action. Her first works immediately took the path of experimentation, attempting to make a direct imprint of the polluted landscape on the surface of the film by immersion. Her documentary requirements quickly led her to make her approach more complex and to take care to avoid any systematism in these experiments. The photographic treatment of the image will then give prevalence to the narrative capacity and the experimentation will be carried out in a strict rigour of appropriateness, welcome in a photographic artistic landscape over-saturated with plastic experiments carried out on the account of ecological disasters. Rather than the immersion of the medium, of the film, it is our own that she engages with Raising the Dust. She now handles several types of images: sober frontal shots are applied to the rocks that have been removed, large colour landscapes unfold a seemingly sublime nature, other black and white shots reintroduce the scientific gesture... So many layers that translate the cohabitation of ambivalent realities and feelings in the perimeter of the mine and its surroundings.