29th Visa pour l’Image – Perpignan

02.09.17 → 17.09.17

Can there be too much coverage of a conflict?
The question may seem disrespectful, but it still needs to be asked, and answered. The program at Visa pour l’Image this year features three exhibitions on the battle for Mosul: Laurent Van der Stockt for Le Monde, Alvaro Canovas for Paris Match, and Lorenzo Meloni for Magnum Photos, with Meloni having a more general approach presenting the collapse of the caliphate. The brutality of the attacks and the geopolitical issues involved are so critical that the battle certainly deserves attention, and extended attention. So there are three exhibitions: of a total of 25, three are on the battle for Mosul. As André Gide said: “Everything has already been said, but as no one was listening, it has to be said all over again.”
At Visa pour l’Image, our ambition is to show and see the whole world, and so we have wondered why, of the thirty or so armed conflicts around the world, only a small number are covered by a large proportion of photojournalists. Of the many stories submitted and reviewed by our teams, a few dozen, either directly or indirectly, have been on Mosul. And for the first time ever in the history of the festival, the four nominees for the Paris Match Visa d’or News award are on the same subject: Mosul.
What about Raqqa? What about the insidious, unnoticed civil wars wreaking havoc
in Africa, for example, in Mali, Burundi, the Congo, Somalia, South Sudan, Ethiopia, Egypt and Libya? And what about the fight against the drug trade in Mexico, the second most deadly con ict in 2016? And if we want to keep talking about ISIS, what about its development in the Philippines ?
A few weeks ago, a photographer who had just returned from Mosul was indignant because he had not been able to sell his photos to a single newspaper, so decided to put them on line, free of charge. That decision is so absurd it scarcely deserves comment, yet it does raise one basic question: have picture editors seen too many stories on Mosul?
One of the great names in photojournalism, Don McCullin, drove the point home when speaking in Perpignan a few years ago: “Before you go off and cover wars, cover the poverty you see outside your own front door.” He has already said it, no doubt many times, but as nobody was listening, it has to be said all over again.

Jean-François Leroy
July 10, 2017

 

EXHIBITIONS
Zohra BensemraLives on a wire
Daniel Berehulak« They are slaughtering us like animals » Inside President Duterte’s brutal antidrug campaign in the Philippines
Ferhat BoudaBerbers in morocco, resisting and defending their culture
Renée C. Byer« No safe place » Life in the U.S. for afghan refugees
Alvaro CanovasRegaining Mosul, a bitter struggle
Sarah CaronInchallah Cuba!
Stephen DockHuman trafficking, the scourge of Nepal
Stanley GreeneTribute
Ed KashiCKDU, in the hot zone
Meridith KohutThe collapse of Venezuela
Isadora KosofskyJuveniles in prison, and after
Marco LongariCrowds and solitude in Africa
Lu GuangDevelopment and pollution
Lorenzo MeloniThe collapse of the Caliphate
Michael NicholsA Wild Life
Darcy PadillaDreamers
Angela Ponce RomeroAyacucho
Emanuele ScorcellettiItaly rent asunder
Vlad SokhinWarm Waters
Amy ToensingWidowhood
Larry TowellStanding Rock
Laurent Van der StocktThe battle for Mosul
Rafael Yaghobzadeh – Ukraine: from one war to another
International Daily Press
World Press Photo

Visa d’or
Visa d’or News Award: Laurent Van der Stockt
Visa d’or Feature Award: Daniel Berehulak
Visa d’or Daily Press Award: Helsingin Sanomat (Finlande)
ICRC Humanitarian Visa d’or Award – International Committee of the Red Cross: Angela Ponce Romero
Figaro Magazine Lifetime Achievement Visa d’or Award: Michael Nichols
Visa d’or franceinfos: Award for the Best Digital News Story: Vlad Sokhin

Awards
Canon Female Photojournalist Award: Catalina Martin-Chico
Ville de Perpignan Rémi Ochlik Award: Rafael Yaghobzadeh
Pierre & Alexandra Boulat Award: Romain Laurendeau
Prix Photo – Foundation Yves Rocher Award: Fausto Podavini
Camille Lepage Award: Pierre Faure
Ani-PixPalace Award : Jérémie Jung

Photo credits

Photo in Front: © Laurent Van der Stockt / Getty Images Reportage for Le Monde

Informations

Visa pour l’Image – Perpignan
Couvent des Minimes
Rue Rabelais
66000 Perpignan

visapourlimage.com

Free Admission

Contacts

Sylvie Grumbach
Martial Hobeniche
Daniela Jacquet
Valérie Bourgois
visapourlimage@2e-bureau.com
+33 1 42 33 93 18

Download

SCREENINGS (pdf)
PORTFOLIO REVIEWS (pdf)
TRANSMISSION pour L’IMAGE (pdf)
AGENDA – Meetings, Symposiums, Book Signings, Exhibition Visits, … (pdf)
WHO IS IN PERPIGNAN (on September 9, 2017, pdf)