Christian Caujolle's profile photo

Christian Caujolle

Paris

Journalist, Art Critic and Photographer at Freelance

Articles

  • 3 days ago | revue21.fr | Christian Caujolle

    L’immigration clandestine en provenance de Chine a considérablement augmenté aux États-Unis. Avec ce cliché en clair-obscur évoquant les tableaux de Ribera ou du Caravage, le photographe John Moore dresse un portrait saisissant d’un petit groupe de migrants à la frontière mexicaine.

  • 2 weeks ago | revue21.fr | Christian Caujolle

    La photojournaliste Véronique de Viguerie a saisi en pleine discussion ces femmes d’un petit village de montagne en Afghanistan. Les talibans viennent de leur interdire d’aller vendre leurs poteries dans la ville voisine. Une photo forte comme une peinture du XIXe siècle où l’esprit de résistance viendrait remplacer l’exotisme orientaliste. Le 5 novembre 2024, la photojournaliste Véronique de Viguerie est à Kolala dans la province montagneuse du Badakhchan, au nord-est de l’Afghanistan.

  • Dec 19, 2024 | blind-magazine.com | Christian Caujolle

    It’s a hefty volume of more than 350 pages, and it took Melissa Harris over 10 years to produce it. It is also the only biography — which is by no means a hagiography — of an essential photographer who has always remained secretive and who has granted only a few interviews on the occasion of book publications or exhibitions. In these interviews, he talks about his work, about photography, but never about himself.

  • Nov 21, 2024 | loeildelaphotographie.com | Christian Caujolle

    In 2008, the Photo Phnom Penh festival was born on the initiative of Alain Arnaudet who was then the director of the French Cultural Center, now the French Institute of Cambodia (IFC). He had already launched a dance festival, a street music festival, and theater activities, when he met two young people who wanted to exhibit their photographs before the creation of the gallery, library and restaurant.

  • Nov 21, 2024 | loeildelaphotographie.com | Christian Caujolle

    Mech Sereyrath – When the sun reaches the riverTo produce more, to consume more, we always need more energy. This has long been one of the problems that has slowed down Cambodia’s economic development and this is why the decision was taken to build the large Lower Se San II dam in Stung Treng province on the river that is an important tributary of the Tonle Sap, and therefore of the Mekong. Inaugurated in 2018, it is the most powerful dam in the country, the one that produces the most electricity.

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