



La Source | Special edition
Box set containing:
One limited edition of the book
+
One original photograph of your choice, signed and numbered out of 10 (20 x 25 cm format)
In May 2020, as France emerged from lockdown, the Parisian photographer reflected on the collective longing for a “return to the source” and decided to take the phrase literally: tracing the Seine back to its origin, from Paris to Source-Seine. This journey unfolds as a quiet quest—part geographical exploration, part introspective wandering—where, for the span of a voyage, one invents a personal epic.
This auteur book marks the encounter between photographer Frédéric Stucin and one of the finest literary voices of our time, Marie NDiaye.
220.00€
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Arbre, 2020
Artiste: Frédéric Stucin
Texte de: Marie NDiaye
Langues: Anglais, Francais
Dimensions: 33.2 x 26.5 x 1.5 cm
Poids: 1.9 kg
Pages: 72
Description
Frédéric Stucin
“We are the discreet heroes of the narratives we dream. Some evenings, when we run faster and more headlong than usual, we may even believe we are heroes in real life. So we invent exploits in our own image, we swim a little too far in the shadowy water, we dance on a shifting roof, we create splendid spectres that fade away at sunrise.”, extract from the preface by Marie Ndiaye
Frédéric Stucin is a photographer. Specialized in portraits of personalities or anonymous people, especially for the press, where he also publishes reports, he leads in parallel a personal practice. His publications, Endorphine (éditions Filigranes, 2021), Only Bleeding (éditions du Bec en l’air, 2019), and Trois étoiles (catalog of the Musée Nicéphore Niépce exhibition, 2016) closely combine the exploration of reality and the imaginary. In 2020, his series “Le Décor”, made in Paris during the confinement was promoted to the Eurazeo prize. His photographs have been the subject of several exhibitions, most recently at the Villa Perochon in Niort, the Portrait(s) festival in Vichy, and the Hangar Photo Art Center in Brussels.
Marie NDiaye was born in Pithiviers on June 4, 1967 to a father with Senegalese roots and a French mother. She received the Prix Femina in 2001 for her novel Rosie Carpe and the Prix Goncourt in 2009 for Trois femmes puissantes. She is one of only two living French authors in the repertoire of the Comédie Française with her play Papa doit manger. In 2009, she participated in the writing of the screenplay for Claire Denis’ film, White Material. In 2020, she was awarded the Marguerite-Yourcenar prize for the whole of her work.