Publisher's Description
With Structure, Isabelle Boccon-Gibod reinvents the family portrait and provokes us, in these times of digitalization and shared images, to reflect on the fundamental cell on which every society is based: the family, subject at the center of heated debates when we legislate on parenthood in the context of new technologies of procreation.
By creating this corpus of fixed black and white images, each composed in a large 5’x7’ frame, the photographer has produced a work of anthropological scope, reaching beyond representation by placing the subject at palpable distance, thereby objectifying it.
Reviewed by Meggan Gould on photo-eye Blog.