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Kering and Paris Photo

Kick-started in 2018, together with France’s Ministry of Culture, the Elles X Paris Photo art fair has been supported by Women In Motion since 2020. The tour through the expo’s aisles was designed as a way of uncovering wonders, treasures and surprises from galleries and publishers alike. Every November, Women In Motion strives to raise the profile of women photographers at this global-reaching event. Discover the partnership between Kering’s program and Paris Photo.

Women In Motion promotes women photographers at Paris Photo 2024
To celebrate its 27th edition, the Paris Photo international photography fair once again takes over ...
Women In Motion: dedicating november 2023 to women photographers
The month of November sees Paris celebrate photography. Discover the range of events and initiatives...
Women In Motion: photography events in November 2022
Traditionally dedicated to photography, November in Paris provides an opportunity to (re)discover ar...

Women In Motion promotes women photographers at Paris Photo 2024

To celebrate its 27th edition, the Paris Photo international photography fair once again takes over the Grand Palais. From November 7 to 10, the venue will play host to galleries, artists, institutions, curators, journalists, collectors, and photography lovers. This year sees Women In Motion further its support for the unmissable event.

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Women In Motion reaffirms its support for Elles x Paris Photo 


Kick-started in 2018, together with the French Ministry of Culture, the Elles x Paris Photo exhibition has served to boost the representation of women artists at the art fair, increasing over the years from 20% to 38%. For the fifth consecutive year, Women In Motion has partnered with the event to continue spotlighting women photographers.
The 2024 exhibition is curated by Raphaëlle Stopin, director of the Centre photographique Rouen Normandie and former director of the Festival de Hyères. 
 

Women In Motion steps up its efforts to endorse four galleries at Paris Photo


Aside from supporting Elles x Paris Photo, Kering’s program renews its commitment to raising the profile of women photographers. This year marks the first time the photo fair will directly assist four galleries, presenting both monograph and group exhibitions.
 

 

Martini & Ronchetti


Founded in Genoa in 1969 as the Galleria Pourquoi Pas with a focus on international artists of the twentieth century avant-garde scene, Martini & Ronchetti showcases the work of Italian photographer Lisetta Carmi. 

 

Lisetta Carmi 

Lisetta Carmi was born into a Jewish middle-class family in Genoa in 1924. She then fled to Switzerland in 1938 before returning to Italy at the end of World War II where she graduated from the Milan Conservatory. Following an extensive global tour performing a string of concerts, Carmi cut short her musical career to take up photography, focusing her lens on everyday life in the heart of Genoa. Carmi’s ability to chronicle lives and capture portraits of figures of the time saw her travel to Sardinia, Paris and as far as Latin America. Lisetta Carmi is most remembered for I Travestiti (1972) which documents the Genoese trans community. She passed away in Cisternino in 2022. 

 

I travestiti, 1965, courtesy Martini & Ronchetti

Higher Pictures


Higher Pictures was established in New York in 2007 before relocating to Brooklyn in 2020. The gallery serves to exhibit contemporary artists. Its latest exhibition jointly features the photographic creations of Carla Williams, Susan Lipper, Janice Guy and Sheila Pinkel. 
 

Carla Williams

Born in 1965, Carla Williams is a photographer, archivist, editor, and writer who resides in New Orleans. She has written two books on the history of photography, including The Black Female Body: A Photographic History which she co-authored with Deborah Willis. Published by TBW Books in 2023, Williams’ debut monograph entitled Tender won the Paris Photo–Aperture First PhotoBook Award that same year. Her inaugural solo exhibition at Higher Pictures was also held last year, in 2023. 


Untitled (striped robe) #4.2
1984/85 
Courtesy the artist and Higher Pictures
 

Susan Lipper

American-born, Susan Lipper graduated from Yale in 1983. Raised in New York, she took up intermittent residency, between 1988 and 1992, in a small community of West Virginia where she interviewed and photographed the locals. Breaking with the documentary tradition, Lipper’s photographs granted sitters a theatrical license as they reveal another version of themselves. In 1994, this body of work was shown at the Photographers’ Gallery in London. That very year, Lipper published her monograph Grapevine, succeeded by Trip (1993–1999) and Domesticated Land (2012–2016) to form a trilogy of her travels across the American West. 


Untitled (Grapevine)
1991

Janice Guy 

Born in London, Janice Guy started making self-portraits in the 1970s while studying at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf in Germany. Such endeavors helped Guy to gain exposure at a groundbreaking survey exhibition of female artists – Künstlerinnen Internationale 1877-1977 – before presenting her first solo show in 1979. In the ensuing years, she would direct a gallery in Naples before opening Murray Guy in New York, which ran from 1998 through 2017. 2007 saw Guy’s photographs re-emerge from a group show curated at New York City’s White Columns art space, followed by a number of solo exhibitions to date. 

 

Untitled, 1979

Sheila Pinkel

Born in 1941 in Virginia, Sheila Pinkel graduated from UCLA in 1977 before becoming Professor of Art at Pomona College for nearly 25 years. Throughout her career, Pinkel has worked on experimental light studies, followed by an exploration of documentary photography, all the while spearheading long-term community-based projects and developing an interest in public art. She frequently writes for the journals Leonardo, Afterimage and Heresies. Her work has been exhibited extensively since the late 1970s.

Folded Paper
c. 1974-1982
 

Monitor


Initiated by Paola Capata in 2003 as an exhibit space intended for artistic experimentation, the Rome-based Monitor gallery shines a light on the photographic art of Elisa Montessori.

Elisa Montessori

A native of Genoa (1931), Elisa Montessori held her first exhibition in the Italian capital in 1951. Since the 1950s, Montessori has captured forms and styles through a minimalist lens, with her work bridging pure abstraction and evocative figuration. Centered on the concepts of accumulation and subtraction, her creations also explore the influence of two worlds – juxtaposing the culturally diverse West with the profusely symbolic East – and the visceral connection that binds women to nature. Elisa Montessori currently lives and works in Rome.


Tropismi
1976

Nadja Vilenne

 

Located in Liège, Nadja Vilenne opened its doors in November 1998, representing some twenty emerging and established artists from Belgium and abroad. On this occasion, the gallery will present the prints of Aglaia Konrad. 

Aglaia Konrad

Aglaia Konrad was born in Salzburg in 1960. Over the last two decades, her work has examined the transformation of conurbations and megacities, including the likes of São Paulo, Beijing, Chicago, Dakar and Cairo. She develops her craft through on-site research and visual archives, blending photographs, videos, projected slides, and large-scale photo installations as well as drawing on her published visual essays. More recently, Konrad has created multiple solo shows, with her latest exhibition, Umbau, hosted in 2022 at Antwerp’s FOMU museum of photography.

 

Undecided Frames (Madrid, 2009)
2012

 

Women In Motion: dedicating november 2023 to women photographers

The month of November sees Paris celebrate photography. Discover the range of events and initiatives Women In Motion promotes to shine a light on women photographers.
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Paris Photo – Fiona Rogers's interview
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Jeu de Paume - Clémence Poesy's interview - Julia Margaret Cameron exhibition
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Jeu de Paume – Quentin Bajac's interview - Julia Margaret Cameron exhibition
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Paris Photo – Fiona Rogers's interview
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Jeu de Paume - Clémence Poesy's interview - Julia Margaret Cameron exhibition
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Jeu de Paume – Quentin Bajac's interview - Julia Margaret Cameron exhibition
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Paris Photo – Fiona Rogers's interview
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Jeu de Paume - Clémence Poesy's interview - Julia Margaret Cameron exhibition
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Jeu de Paume – Quentin Bajac's interview - Julia Margaret Cameron exhibition

Women In Motion and Elles X Paris Photo

From November 9 to 12, 2023, photography takes over the Grand Palais Ephémère at the twenty-sixth edition of Paris Photo – the world’s leading photo fair and must-attend event for artists, institutions, curators, collectors and journalists, not forgetting photography lovers and enthusiasts.

For the fourth consecutive year, Women In Motion lends its support to Elles X Paris Photo. This art fair seeks to recognize women photographers and encourage exhibiting galleries to highlight these women artists through a selection of works and interviews. This year’s program was commissioned by Fiona Rogers, the inaugural Curator of the Parasol Foundation Women in Photography project at the Victoria and Albert Museum, aimed at supporting women in photography across acquisitions, commissions, displays and events. Rogers selected 38 artists, including Nan Goldin, Graciela Iturbide and Ishiuchi Miyako – shown at Kyotographie in April 2023, as part of a Kering-sponsored exhibition – as well as Laia Abril, Prix de la Photo Madame Figaro supported in 2016 by Women In Motion and Pixy Liao, Prix Jimei x Madame Figaro, also promoted by Kering’s program in 2018.
 

 

Producing a book to honor five years of support for women photographers 

To mark the fifth anniversary of the Elles x Paris Photo program, Éditions Textuel publishes ELLES, a work assembling the personal stories of artists selected over the years, not to mention insights from the curators involved in the initiative since its inception. The book showcases 130 contemporary photographers who share their voices and images, revealing the driving force behind their creations, their obsessions, their desires and their struggles while celebrating influential women photographers. Together with Women In Motion and the French Ministry of Culture, they have created a rich and inspiring fresco.  

Women In Motion honors Paz Errázuriz

Live from the Maison de l'Amérique Latine, Paz Errázuriz, Histoires Inachevées presents 120 of the Chilean photographer’s prints from 15 series including three previously published: Próceres (1983), Sepur Zarco (2016) and Ñuble (2019). The exhibition also houses her iconic series La Manzana de Adán, produced between 1982 and 1987.

 

Born in 1944 in Santiago (Chile), Paz Errázuriz has spent most of her career documenting people who live in a separate and even parallel universe. Captured often in confined spaces, Errázuriz explores the marginal existence of figures such as circus performers, wrestlers, transvestites and prostitutes, vagabonds and people with a mental illness. Her poetic black-and-white portraits serve to denounce social dictates, homing in on the marginalization that renders some segments of society invisible with a profound observation of the human condition, to the point of subverting the conventions of visual order.

 

This is Paz Errázuriz’s first major solo exhibition at a Paris cultural institution. Joining forces with Women In Motion, the event will publish the photographer’s first monograph published in French, with an English version, both edited by the Atelier EXB. In 2017, Errázuriz was awarded the Prix de la Photo Madame Figaro, an endeavor that also partners with Kering's in-house program.

 

Paz Errázuriz, Histoires Inachevées
September 8 till January 24, 2024
Commissioned by Béatrice Andrieux, an independent curator for contemporary art and photography
Maison de l'Amérique Latine
217 Boulevard Saint-Germain, 75007 Paris, France
Open Monday to Friday (10:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.) and Saturdays (2:00 to 6:00 p.m.).
Free of charge. 

Paz Errázuriz à la Maison de l'Amérique Latine

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Women In Motion honors Julia Margaret Cameron

The Musée du Jeu de Paume plays host to Arresting Beauty: Julia Margaret Cameron, France’s first large-scale retrospective devoted to the British artist and precursor of modern-day photographers.

 

Julia Margaret Cameron was born in 1815, in Kolkata, into a well-to-do family dividing their time between England and India. She was first introduced to photography in 1864 at the age of 48, before embarking on a 12-year career. Strongly criticized at the time, Cameron’s style has since emerged as the hallmark of a visionary, revolutionizing photography as we know it. She rejected the sharp precision prised by her contemporaries, often including scratches, smudges and other traces of her artistic process on her negatives and prints. The exhibit unveils some one hundred captivating photographs, spanning Cameron’s early experiments, her historical and literary allegories, as well as an impressive gallery of contemporary portraits.

 

Julia Margaret Cameron would regularly create portraits of her niece, Julia Jackson, who became mother to a certain Adeline in 1882. Better known by her pen name, in 1926, Virginia Woolf published an account of her great-aunt. Endorsed by Women In Motion, a special one-off podcast was recorded for the exhibition. It features the French actress and film director Clémence Poésy who recounts Cameron's remarkable life through the words of Woolf. Happy listening! 

 

Julia Margaret Cameron: Arresting beauty 
October 10, 2023, to January 28, 2024
Musée du Jeu de Paume 
1, Place de la Concorde, 75001 Paris, France
Open Tuesdays (11:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.) and Wednesday to Sunday (11:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.) 

Headlining women photographers

Lastly, November in the French capital is also a chance to admire large-format photographs by the late and brilliant Sabine Weiss.

Women In Motion staged an original poster campaign to showcase the Women In Motion Award winners for photography with their portraits and self-portraits adorning the walls of Paris’ 1st arrondissement. From September 2023 to February 2024, various works were exhibited at Rue du Louvre, reflecting each photographer’s unique perspective.

After magnifying the creations of the 2019 Award winner, Susan Meiselas, the stage is set for Sabine Weiss. 

Learn more.
 

 

Women In Motion: photography events in November 2022

Traditionally dedicated to photography, November in Paris provides an opportunity to (re)discover artists and works through many events. For the third consecutive year, Women In Motion supports the Elles X Paris Photo exhibition at the Grand Palais Ephémère. Kering also wished to hold events honoring the photographer Sabine Weiss, winner of the 2020 Women In Motion Award for Photography, who passed away at this time last year.
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Women In Motion and Elles X Paris Photo

For the past three years, Women In Motion has supported Elles X Paris Photo, a selection of works and interviews by women photographers exhibited at the Paris Photo international art fair. Curated by Federica Chiocchetti, director of the Musée des Beaux-Arts in Le Locle, Switzerland, the 2022 exhibition comprises a selection of 77 photographic works, held at the Grand Palais Ephémère from November 10th to 13th, 2022. 


As part of this partnership, Women In Motion also supported a day of conversations on Thursday, November 10th, organized and presented by Federica Chiocchetti at the Grand Palais Ephémère.


Launched in 2018 in partnership with France’s Ministry of Culture, the Elles X Paris Photo circuit has been supported by Women In Motion since 2020. This itinerary through the show's aisles was designed as way to discover wonders, treasures and surprises from various galleries and publishers.

 

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Chen Xiaoyi, Crystalloid: Minstrel, 2021, A Thousand Plateaus, SC1

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Nan Goldin (b.1953),Gina at Bruce dinner party, 1991, SOPHIE SCHEIDECKER, C8

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Lee Jungjin, Voice #02, 2019, CAMERA OBSCURA, B33

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3 questions to Federica Chiocchetti, Curator of the Elles X Paris Photo exhibition
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3 Questions to Camille Ménager, director of "Sabine Weiss, One century of photography"
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Elles x Paris Photo: the highlights
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Elles X Paris Photo: sorority
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Adriana Lestido, Madre e Hija de Plaza de Mayo [Mother and daughter from Plaza de Mayo], 1982, Rolf Art Gallery, B19

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Chen Xiaoyi, Crystalloid: Minstrel, 2021, A Thousand Plateaus, SC1

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Nan Goldin (b.1953),Gina at Bruce dinner party, 1991, SOPHIE SCHEIDECKER, C8

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Lee Jungjin, Voice #02, 2019, CAMERA OBSCURA, B33

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3 questions to Federica Chiocchetti, Curator of the Elles X Paris Photo exhibition
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3 Questions to Camille Ménager, director of "Sabine Weiss, One century of photography"
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Elles x Paris Photo: the highlights

Honoring Sabine Weiss

Following the photographer’s death last year, Kering wished to honor the memory of Sabine Weiss, winner of the 2020 Women In Motion Award for Photography. On November 10th, the Group hosts a preview of Le Siècle de Sabine Weiss, a documentary directed by Camille Ménager and produced by Brotherfilms. This unique film reflects on the life of an artist who greatly influenced French humanist photography. The documentary was then  broadcast on the television channel France 5 in early 2023.


Kering is also lending its support to the publication of the latest special issue in the Women In Motion collection. This new edition, published by Fisheye, was available at newsstands and bookstores starting November 10th, 2022. 

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3 questions to Sabine Weiss
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Sabine Weiss, a photographer's life
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3 questions to Sabine Weiss
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Sabine Weiss, a photographer's life
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3 questions to Sabine Weiss
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Sabine Weiss, a photographer's life

Upon receiving her Award in 2020, Sabine Weiss recorded an episode for the Women In Motion podcast. In an interview with Géraldine Sarratia, she shared what first drew her to photography, and discussed her career in France and abroad as well as the challenges of being a woman in what, in the 1960s, was considered a man's industry. An enlightening discussion, worth many a listen! 

In 2020, Women in Motion initiated its partnership with Elles x Paris Photo, through an exceptional digital program, due to Covid restrictions.