Arles: the photo festival returns to the future and invades the city

New exhibition spaces, and a focus on the civil unrest of May 1968 in France are some of the highlights of the 2018 Rencontres d’Arles, a variegated periscope onto the world.

“Being a festival means being everything that happens in a city when it’s invaded by art,” says Sam Stourdzé, the director of Rencontres d’Arles, one of the most important photography expositions in Europe. This is his third time presiding over the historical French festival born in 1970, now in its 49th edition. The numbers are eloquent: 36 exhibitions in the official programme, a number of which are staged in cities close by such as Marseille, Avignon and Nîmes. Nîmes is hosting Qu'est-ce qui est différent?/What is different? by the German artist Wolfgang Tillmans, the first to win the prestigious Turner Prize with photography, and Portraits of space by Candida Höfer from the Düsseldorf School of Photography. Then there are 129 public events – tours with curators and photographers, book presentations, inaugurations, award ceremonies and concerts; 18,500 visitors; 151 artists; and 36 venues where photography comes to life, including 5 spaces that were taken into use for the first time this year.

Pic.1 Guided tour of the "Contemplation" exhibition by the architect Simón Vélez. Ana Lefaux
Pic.2 View of the exhibition of Pia Rondé & Fabien Saleil "Topophilie des cendres", presented at the Palais de Tokyo during Arles 2018. Photo Romain Protin
Pic.3 View of the exhibition of Pia Rondé & Fabien Saleil "Topophilie des cendres", presented at the Palais de Tokyo during Arles 2018. Photo Romain Protin
Pic.4 Guided tour of the "Contemplation" exhibition by the architect Simón Vélez. Ana Lefaux
Pic.5 Guided tour of the "Contemplation" exhibition by the architect Simón Vélez. Ana Lefaux
Pic.6 Guided tour of the "Contemplation" exhibition by the architect Simón Vélez. Ana Lefaux
Pic.7 Guided tour of the "Contemplation" exhibition by the architect Simón Vélez. Ana Lefaux
Pic.8 View of the exhibition by Olga Kravets, Maria Morina & Oksana Yushko, Grozny "Neuf villes". Photo of Romain Protin
Pic.9 View of the exhibition by Olga Kravets, Maria Morina & Oksana Yushko, Grozny "Neuf villes". Photo of Romain Protin
Pic.10 Guided tour of the "Yo Soy Cuba" exhibition by Michael Christopher Brown. Photo Ana Lefaux
Pic.11 Guided tour of the exhibition "Yo Soy Cuba" by Michael Christopher Brown. Photo Ana Lefaux
Pic.12 View of books selected for Book prizes. Romain Protin
Pic.13 Guided tour of the exhibition "Yo Soy Cuba" by Michael Christopher Brown. Photo Ana Lefaux
Pic.14 Robert Frank, New York City, 1951-55. Fotostiftung Schweiz Collection, Winterthur. Artist's gift
Pic.15 Robert Frank, Bus-Stop, Detroit, 1955. Collection Fotostiftung Schweiz, Winterthur. Artist's gift
Pic.16 Protest of May 6, 1968. Articles dedicated to student barricades for the exhibition "1968, What a Story! ". Department of Memory and Cultural Affairs. Paris Police Prefecture photo
Pic.17 Poster by People's Studio at the School of Fine Arts as part of the exhibition "1968, What a Story!". Michel Dixmier Collection. Courtesy Michel Dixmier and Kharbine-Tapabor
Pic.18 Paul Fusco / Magnum Photos, Untitled, from the series RFK Funeral Train, 1968. Courtesy Danziger Gallery
Pic.19 Philippe Parreno, June 8, 1968, 2009 (frame). Courtesy Maja Hoffmann / Luma Foundation
Pic.20 Stephanie Samson Lang, Baltimore, Maryland, 1968, from the series of Rein Jelle Terpstra "The People's View (2014-2018)". Courtesy Stephanie Sansone Lang
Pic.21 Within the "Paradise!" Exhibition: Camargue, manual rice planting, circa 1965. Courtesy Camargue Museum / PNRC
Pic.22 Barrels in the Esso refinery in Fos-sur-Mer, readapted by Atelier Jacques Fillacier in collaboration with André Lemonnier, 1967. Foto It / Studio Robert, Martigues, as part of the "Paradise!" Exhibition. Courtesy Fonds Pôle Intercommunal du Patrimoine Culturel, Conseil de Territoire Istres Ouest Provence, and Métropole Aix-Marseille-Provence
Pic.23 Frantisek Pekar, two children lick their plate, about 1930-1940. Courtesy the city of Chalon-sur-Saône, France. Nicéphore Niépce Museum

“What is totally new compared to the other instalments, is that we have enlarged our network of locations and built new ones. For the first time in 49 iterations of the festival, we did not only reuse derelict places like deconsecrated churches, abandoned terraces and factories, but actually built a bamboo pavilion as a temple consecrated to photography, truly worth a visit. The 1,200-square-metre space was designed and built by the Colombian architect Simón Veléz and by Stefana Simic. It hosts Contemplation, a poetic ensemble of photography, architecture and music, where exclusive large-format black-and-white photos printed on special Japanese paper show the spiritual experience of the French writer and Buddhist monk Matthieu Ricard in the Himalayas.” The four other new venues are Maison Centrale d’Arles (a penitentiary), an old warehouse belonging to the retail chain Monoprix, Maison des Lices, and the Chapelle de la Madeleine.

Being a festival means being everything that happens in a city when it’s invaded by art

Rencontres d’Arles has a precise identity, but lends itself to continuous transformation in symbiosis with its host city, which has featured the fair every summer for almost half a century now. “We are still a photography festival,” says Stourdzé. “We have grown over the years to become a major point of reference, where talent is fostered. This year, the Prix de la photo Madame Figaro was won by Wiktoria Wojciechowska. Of course we look to initiatives similar to ours that feature photography, including the niche events, but we also compare ourselves to other types, for instance cinema festivals.”

William Wegman photo’s is the Festival claim

During Rencontres, Arles is a destination for special experiences. To come here during the three-month happening (until 23.9.2018) is a global immersion. In addition to the exhibitions to visit and the presentations of photography books, there is the atmospheric piazzetta painted by Vincent van Gogh, and inauguration parties on balmy nights. Arles has a long-standing liaison with photography. It was the first city in France to open a photography department in its civic museum, Musée Réattu, in 1965. Today the museum curates a 5,000-piece collection. “What we try to do is ensure that our exhibitions have academically sound, high-level curatorship, much like you’d find in a museum,” says Stourdzé.

Pic.1 Taysir Batniji, Fathers, 2006, exhibition “Gaza to America, Home Away From Home”. Courtesy the artist and Sfeir-Semler Gallery Beirut/Hamburg
Pic.2 Taysir Batniji, Yasmine Batniji, Newport Coast (California), Adam, 2017, exhibition “Gaza to America, Home Away From Home”. Courtesy the artist and Sfeir-Semler Gallery Beirut/Hamburg
Pic.3 Matthieu Gafsou, Monaco, july 15, 2015, exhibition “H+”. Courtesy the artist, Galerie C and MAPS
Pic.4 Matthieu Gafsou, Freiburg, march 30, 2017. Exhibition “H+”. Courtesy the artist, Galerie C and MAPS
Pic.5 Gregor Sailer, Carson City VI / Vårgårda, Sweden, 2016, exhibition “The Potemkine Village”. Courtesy the artist
Pic.6 Gregor Sailer, Junction City IV, Fort Irwin, US Army, Mojave desert, California, USA, 2016, exhibition “The Potemkine Village”. Courtesy the artist
Pic.7 René Burri, Canada, Montreal, 1967. Exhibition “The Imaginary Pyramids”. René Burri © Magnum Photos, René Burri Foundation. Courtesy Musée de l’Élysée
Pic.8 René Burri – Paris Abu Dhabi-Egitto – 21 december 1991, 1991. Exhibition “The Imaginary Pyramids”. René Burri © Magnum Photos, René Burri Foundation. Courtesy Musée de l’Élysée
Pic.9 William Wegman, Casual, 2002. Exhibition “Being Human”. Courtesy the artist and Sperone Westwater Gallery
Pic.10 Feng Li, White Night, Chengdu, 2017
Pic.11 Feng Li, White Night, Chengdu, 2015
Pic.12 Wolfgang Tillmans, Springer, 1987, exhibition “What is different?”. Courtesy Galerie Chantal Crousel, Paris and Galerie Buchholz, Berlin/Colonia
Pic.13 Courtesy Galerie Chantal Crousel, Paris and Galerie Buchholz, Berlin/Colonia
Pic.14 Candida Höfer, Van Abbemuseum Eindhoven III 2003, exhibition “Portraits of spaces”. Courtesy l’artista and VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 2018
Pic.15 Candida Höfer, Elbphilharmonie Hamburg Herzog & de Meuron Hamburg VIII 2016, exhibition “Portraits of spaces”. Courtesy the artist and VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 2018
Pic.16 Bruno Serralongue, Abri [Shelter]
Pic.17 Bruno Serralongue, Photographic documentation of the destruction of a camp for migrants in Calais, known as the "National Shantytown" or "New Jungle," October 24-27, 2016. Exhibition "From Calais". Frac Grand Large Collection - Hauts-de-France. Courtesy the artist and Air de Paris
Pic.18 Stéphanie Lacombe, Le Roi Lion (The Lion King), Paris, 2007 May, Ordinary Table 2006-2008, exhibition “Free Lunch”. Courtesy the artist
Pic.19 Anne Golaz, Mooty, from the Corbeau series, 2004-2017, in the "Raven" exhibition. Courtesy Galerie C
Pic.20 Anne Golaz, The Work from the Corbeau series, 2004-2017, in the "Raven" exhibition. Courtesy Galerie C
Pic.21 Anton Roland Laub, Annunciation Church of the "Retreat of the Nuns", Bucharest, from the Mobile Churches series, 2013-2017. Courtesy the artist
Pic.22 Anton Roland Laub, New Saint John Church, Bucharest, from the Mobile Churches series, 2013-2017. Courtesy the artist
Pic.23 Paulien Oltheten, Liberté, Paris, 2017, in the exhibition "La Défense, The Venturing Gaze". Courtesy the artist and Gallery Les Filles du Calvaire
Pic.24 Paulien Oltheten, Square, La Défense, 2017, in the exhibition "La Défense, The Venturing Gaze". Courtesy the artist and Gallery Les Filles du Calvaire
Pic.25 Pipilotti Rist, Pixel Forest, 2016. View of the installation "Pipilotti Rist: Sip my Ocean", Museum for Contemporary Art Sydney, Australia, 2017. Photo Anna Kucera Courtesy the artist, Hauser & Wirth and Luhring Augustine
Pic.26 Pipilotti Rist, Pixel Forest, 2016. View of the installation "Pipilotti Rist: Sip my Ocean", Museum for Contemporary Art Sydney, Australia, 2017. Photo Anna Kucera
Pic.27 Pipilotti Rist, Pixel Forest, 2016. View of the installation "Pipilotti Rist: Sip my Ocean", Museum for Contemporary Art Sydney, Australia, 2017. Photo Anna Kucera

“Back to the Future” is this year’s subtitle, forming a thread shared by the different sections. “We tried to abolish the categories of past, present and future; we aimed at making them fluid, permeable and absolutely interconnected,” he continues. This comprises the celebration of important anniversaries such as the May 1968 events in France that made way for radical change by means of revolts, utopias and inclinations. At the exhibition 1968, quelle histoire! previously unseen photographs from the archives of the Paris Police Prefecture, the Paris Match weekly and the Gamma-Rapho-Keystone collection show different points of view of the unrest. The pictures are of great historical and documentary value. The American universe plays a major role at Rencontres: America Great Again! is a section of the official programme with a prophetic title and impeccable timing, now that the Trump era has arrived. The section shows the American photographer Paul Fusco’s The Train: RFK’s Last Journey, a colour photo reportage of the mourners who three days after Senator Robert F. Kennedy’s assassination on 6 June 1968 lined the railway tracks from New York to Washington to pay homage to the train carrying his coffin. The Sidelines exhibition is about the socioeconomic divide, big contradictions and broken dreams in the USA, with pictures by the great Swiss storyteller Robert Frank. Also part of the American section is The Whiteness of the Whale, a combination of overexposed colour photos showing everyday life in the US seen through the lens of the Brit Paul Graham.

As traditional at Rencontres d’Arles, the offering is intergenerational, in order to offer a variegated periscope onto the world. Laura Henno from Paris is included in the America Great Again! She is the 2007 recipient of the Prix Découverte awarded by the Rencontres festival. Her photos shown here are the result of a two-month observation of community life in Slab City, California, an off-the-grid renegade settlement in the Californian desert. “Photography is often the best way to document how the world is changing under our very eyes,” says Stourdzé. Besides the past and present, there is a kaleidoscopic photographic exploration of what is yet to come: artificial intelligence, augmented reality and transhumanism. For his series H+, Matthieu Gafsou took portraits of body modification and enhancement, showing how avant-garde technology can compensate for physical and psychic shortcomings.

“Our age is inspiring to photographers,” concludes Sam Stourdzé, “because it forces us to design a world that is never too far off, that is crossed by reality, fantasy, imagination, progress, future and fiction.”

Opening image: Marcelo Brodsky, Paris, 1968. 1968: The Fire of Ideas, exhibition “1968, What a Story! ”. Courtesy the artist, Henrique Faria Fine Art, New York & Rolf Art Gallery, Buenos Aires

  • Les Rencontres d’Arles
  • 2 july – 23 september 2018
  • Different locations, Arles, France