Festival
Arles 2012 : Jean-Christophe Béchet

Jean-Christophe Béchet

Accidents © Jean-Christophe Béchet

Accidents © Jean-Christophe Béchet

Accidents © Jean-Christophe Béchet

Accidents © Jean-Christophe Béchet

Accidents © Jean-Christophe Béchet

Accidents © Jean-Christophe Béchet

Accidents © Jean-Christophe Béchet

Accidents © Jean-Christophe Béchet

Accidents © Jean-Christophe Béchet

Accidents © Jean-Christophe Béchet

Accidents © Jean-Christophe Béchet

Accidents © Jean-Christophe Béchet

Accidents © Jean-Christophe Béchet

Accidents © Jean-Christophe Béchet

Accidents © Jean-Christophe Béchet

Accidents © Jean-Christophe Béchet

Accidents © Jean-Christophe Béchet

Accidents © Jean-Christophe Béchet

Accidents © Jean-Christophe Béchet

Accidents © Jean-Christophe Béchet
Jean-Christophe Béchet - ENSP 1988
Accidents
Trying in vain to depict the slobber of a panting animal, the Greek painter Protogenes ended up hurling a sponge at his picture. The accidental result was that he got the effect he was after. This anecdote, told by Pliny the Elder, is quoted by Pierre Soulages to explain the importance of “accidents” in painting. In photography, accidents arise from the tools used. My own accidents bear the traces of silver image technology. There is no nostalgia about this, only a certainty that they are evidence of a precise moment in time.
When it happens, an accident is negative, an unfortunate event. Which is why an aesthetic accident has to be a blunder, a mishap, a mistake. If it is deliberately sought (using plastic cameras, or vintage Smartphone applications, for example), it is just a stylistic effect. The accidents which are important to me are those that have a certain fictional depth. They stretch time, creating the sensation of a tracking shot. The image is no longer detached from what is out of the frame. The leak of light fixes the images in another documentary dimension. Here, the accident reveals a specifically photographic blend of narrative and documents, poetry and the truth of the moment. In all of my books, I have included images of unintended reality. Confronted with them, as with Protogenes’s sponge, one is in the presence of a small aesthetic miracle. I think all creative artists love the moment when the piece they are working on escapes their control.
The discovery of a successful accident brings happiness. To turn it into fully-fledged work of art is an act of complicity with the public. It also demonstrates, through the absurd, the importance of improvisation – even the “bum-notes” – in our work. It is evidence of a freedom of style. Like virtuoso jazz players who use free jazz to push their instruments to the limit. The accident happens when one is totally open to those happy flukes that arise from disorder. It thwarts any sense of security, repetition, or control. And it is particularly necessary in real-life photography.
Jean-Christophe Béchet
Jean-Christophe Béchet
Born in 1964 in Marseille. Lives and works in Paris.
Jean-Christophe Béchet is happy to switch from colour to black and white, traditional or digital to film, choosing the format to suit the project. He works in the tradition of “street photography”, whether American, French or Japanese, and considers it important to stick with reality and the subjective, unposed document, in these days when everything (the art market, “image rights”, digital retouching) is nudging photographers towards staged photography. He seeks to avoid creating introverted series, preferring to capture something specifically photographic. With every book he publishes, he constructs a subjective approach in which his view of reality creates a dialogue with the specific nature of the medium he has chosen. The place of the individual in contemporary landscape, whether urban or rural, is what concerns him most. Work in progress is a study of his native city, Marseille and, at the same time, a series photographed in the mountains. His work has been exhibited extensively and has led to the publication of eight monographs. He is represented by the Photo4 gallery, Paris, and Les Douches gallery, Paris.
Links
http://www.rencontres-arles.com
http://www.jcbechet.com
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