A clothbound collection of Alexandre de Mortemart’s richly textural black-and-white cityscapes.
	The black and white shot   photographs (2016-2019), part of de Mortemart's Quest project, portray   humans deluged in daily routine, lost in the anonymity of large cities,   facing the unknown in search of themselves. The characters are seeking   solutions and perhaps answers to the reason for their existence—lost   in the universe, with a sentiment of solitude and anxiety but with the   desire to find a path in a rapidly changing world. With the belief that   we are entering an era of increasing uncertainty where people are losing   faith and lacking the answers to dealing with a fractured world, the   men and women appearing in Quest are not capable of telling who they   are, nor where they come from in a world they hardly understand any   longer.
	
		Alexandre de Mortemart (born 1961, lives between London, Calcutta   and Paris) started his photography as a   photojournalist in France. Travelling around the world from Japan to   India across the United States, and Europe, photography has been his   mean of expression since the age of 14. His first professional   assignment came in the early 80s for weekly magazines in Japan where he   resided for five years. Upon returning to Paris he started   collaborations with French newspapers Le Figaro, Liberation, Le Monde,   magazines Elle, Vogue, l'Egoiste among others till the mid 90s when he   ventured into cinema and started directing short and documentary movies.   Alexandre de Mortemart work has been reviewed and featured by   international critique and exhibited in France, Japan, United States,   including the Aperture Gallery (New York) and the Galerie Agathe   Gaillard (Paris), amongst others. He was  awarded the   Lensculture Black and White prize.
				 
				
						Foreword by Agathe Gaillard.
				 
			published in February 2020
				
English edition
				21,5 x 29,5 (hardcover, cloth binding)
				160 pages (133 ill.)
			 
			
			 
			ISBN : 978-88-6208-696-7
			EAN : 9788862086967
				 
in stock