This week on APAD: Jean-François Hamelin with Temiscamingue.
This week, APAD’s guest is Montréal based photographer Jean-François Hamelin with his work Temiscamingue.
The Temiscamingue region is named after the lake that set its boundaries. My first contact with the region was unsettling. I traveled the land to try better my understanding of a region that seems mired in a state of transition, thus rendering its identity intangible. This project, the results of these wanderings, sit between the travel document and a sociological survey. Temiscamingue is a reflection on what remains of our link with these vast territories that contributed to the shaping the country’s identity and the relationship that we maintain with our land.
This week at APAD: airi from Tokyo.
On mil o mil
(“see what I see”) I put one picture almost everyday from the archive of my photographs.This week, a picture a day’s guest is airi, a japanese photographer now based in Tokyo.
My photo blog mil o mil (it means “see what I see”) is like a note. I put one picture almost everyday from the archive of my photographs. I chose the picture freely without intention. The camera makes us to see more details in the life.
This week, a picture a day’s guest is Krystel Marois with her series One Last Roll.
I lived in Berlin (Germany) for almost three years and the series consists of selected slides from the last roll of film I shot in November 2012, one month before I left. They represent my attempt to grasp the essence of my life over there through the meaningful places of my everyday life.