Photographie.com is the oldest French photography online magazine. [1] The subscription-free magazine includes all genres of photography and contains exhibition and photo book reviews, essays, analysis and criticism about photography and culture. [2] It also provides video interviews with photographers, curators and other photography experts.
Photographie.com was created in 1996 by Jean-François Bauret, Yan Morvan and Didier de Faÿs to advance the interests of photographers. [2] In 1998 Photographie.com launched the Bourse du Talent photography competition which awards prizes to young photographers in four different categories: reportage, portrait, fashion and landscape. [3] The work of the prize winners is exhibited at the Bibliothèque nationale de France every year. [4]
Édouard Boubat was a French photojournalist and art photographer.
Keiichi Tahara was a Japanese photographer.
Guy Hersant is a French photographer.
Ananias Leki Dago is an Ivorian photographer.
24h (24h.com) is a photography program established by the French photography magazine Photographie.com and kicked off in October 2010 commissioning photographers to document specific events around the globe. During each event, selected photographers are given 24 hours to express their talent and explore and photograph whatever interests them. Selected shots are disseminated live on the 24h.com website. This experiment in "neo-media" enables a photographer's work to be posted very quickly.
Diana Lui is a Malaysian artist, photographer and filmmaker. She is known for her large format photographic portraits of today's growing hybrid generation of multicultural and multiethnic individuals.
Thomas Devaux, born in 1980 in Marcq-en-Barœul (North), is an artistic photographer from France. He lives and works in Paris.
Laurent Elie Badessi is a French photographer and artist based in New York City.
Réalités was a French monthly of the post World War II era which commenced publication in February 1946, flourishing during the Trente Glorieuses, a period of optimism, recovery and prosperity in France after the austerity of Occupation, ceasing in 1978 in France, although the later US edition continued until 1981. Its articles ranged across French culture, economy and politics, and featured profusely illustrated stories of interest to tourists, especially those traveling to French colonies.
Robert Delpire was an art publisher, editor, curator, film producer and graphic designer who lived and worked in Paris. He predominantly concerned himself with documentary photography, influenced by his interest in anthropology.
Brodbeck & de Barbuat form a couple of visual artists working with photography, video and installation.
Jean Dieuzaide was a French photographer.
François Tuefferd was a French photographer, active from the 1930s to the 1950s. He also ran a darkroom and gallery in Paris, Le Chasseur d'Images, where he printed and exhibited the works of his contemporaries. His best-known imagery features the French circus.
The Séeberger dynasty, known as the Frères Séeberger; three brothers Jules (1872–1932), Henri (1876-1956) and Louis' (1874-1946) sons Jean (1910-1979) and Albert (1914-1999), pioneered fashion photography in France, beginning in the twentieth century.
Didier Ben Loulou, is a Franco-Israeli photographer.
Léon Herschtritt was a French humanist photographer. He won the Niépce Prize as a young photographer in 1960.
Jean-Claude Lemagny was a French library curator and historian of photography; a specialist in contemporary photography, he contributed to the world of fine-art photography in several roles.
Edouard "Eddie" Kuligowski was a French photographer who won the Niépce Prize, the most prestigious prize for a photographer in France.
Youqine Lefèvre, is a Belgian photographer and photojournalist.
Yvonne Chevalier was a French magazine photographer who was active from 1929 to 1970.