Anthropocene — Nicolas Guiraud Probes the Effects of Human Activity on Our Environment

















Nicolas Guiraud is one of the talented photographers who have exhibited their work at gallery Espace Jörg Brockmann, the juror of the current #FotoRoomOPEN edition (submit your work before next 15 May 2019 for a chance to have a solo exhibition at the gallery!).
The term anthropocene was popularized in the last few decades as a definition of the current era, a time in which human intervention (anthropos means ‘man’ in Greek) is having a profound impact on the environment we live in. Anthropocene by 48 year-old French photographer Nicolas Guiraud is a series of landscape photographs shot all over the world that explore the effects of these interventions.
“I have always been interested in the idea of anti-nature as proposed by French philosopher Clément Rosset in his book L’anti-nature” Nicolas explains. “It might sound paradoxical but the idea of pure nature is slightly unrealistic to me, therefore I am attracted to images—whether they’re portraits, landscapes or architecture photographs—that reveal the very fluid transition between what’s natural and what’s artificial.”
Besides the afore-mentioned book by Clément Rosset, Nicolas was inspired by land artists such as Walter de Maria, Robert Smithson and Richard Long. Some of his favorite contemporary photographers are Alec Soth, Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Jeff Wall and Joel Sternfeld. The last photobook he bought was The Frenchman by Philippe Halsman.
Nicolas’ #threewordsforphotography are:
Frontier. Artifice. Encounter.
Keep looking...

Parliament of Owls — Jack Latham’s New Photobook Continues His Interest in Conspiracy Theories

FotoCal — Photography Awards, Grants and Calls for Entries Closing in November 2019

“They Live and Work and Breathe and Die Right on the Edge” — Portraits by Tracy Chandler

FotoFirst — Tourism, Romance and Identity Come Together in Farah Foudeh’s Series ‘Just Because I Don’t Cry Doesn’t Mean I Am Strong’

Roselena Ramistella’s Lyrical Photographs Capture the Communities Living in Rural Sicily

Tomoya Imamura’s Photos Are Filled with Symbols Referencing Hungary’s History

In These Staged Images, Rydel Cerezo Explores His Relationship with the Catholic Church
