Patrick Cariou: Works 1985-2005
By (Author) Patrick Cariou
Damiani
Damiani
23rd December 2022
13th October 2022
Italy
General
Non Fiction
Photojournalism and documentary photography
Photography: portraits and self-portraiture
779.092
Hardback
228
Width 229mm, Height 286mm
1420g
"Patrick's work offers a mesmerising journey around the world in search of the divine, offering a timeless portrait of people living on the fringe, creating life on their own terms." - i-D For more than 25 years, French photographer Patrick Cariou has traveled to far out places around the globe, documenting people living on the fringes of society and making a way for themselves. Whether photographing surfers, gypsies, Rastafarians, or rude boys of Kingston, Cariou celebrates his subjects as they are: peoples of the earth who meet the struggles of life with honor, dignity, and joy. Bringing together works from his groundbreaking monographs including Surfers, Yes Rasta, Trenchtown Love, and Gypsies, Works 1985-2005 takes us on a scenic journey around the world, offering an intimate and captivating look at cultures that distance themselves from the blessings and curses of modernism. Given access to these hermetic realms, Cariou presents a fascinating portrait of resistance in a multiplicity of forms. The landscape plays a vital role in Cariou's work, revealing how people live shapes their identity and destiny in equal part. Whether following the waves, living in the mountains, or surviving urban and rural poverty, Cariou's subjects reval the importance of preserving one's native culture at a time of Western cultural hegemony. The spirit of pride and defiance comes alive in his work; each of the peoples portrayed have found a way to survive despite the brutality facing them and the earth alike.
Patrick's work offers a mesmerising journey around the world in search of the divine, offering a timeless portrait of people living on the fringe, creating life on their own terms.--Sara Rosen "i-D"
Patrick Cariou is a French photographer born in 1963, with a career spanning over 40 years. He is best known for his dramatic portraits that reveal an ethnographic research of communities at the edge of society. His books include: Surfers (1997), Yes Rasta (2000), Trenchtown Love (2003), Gypsies (2011).