Richard Pak
Photographe
French artist born in 1972, Richard Pak practice a photograph sensitive to particular interest to his contemporaries in the private or public sphere. Not hesitating to move from a documentary-like style to a serial, systematic approach, as well as combining writing and video to his photographic research, Richard Pak navigates between representation of the real and the fictional evocation.
Having lived and worked for five years in London, he made many visits to the United States between 2003 and 2009 to achieve the Pursuit series, which is co-published the monograph by Journal and Filigranes in 2012. Winner of the Residence The Photographic Eye urban, it does the job The Brothers-like in 2014, published by Watermarks.
His work has been exhibited in France and abroad, including: the Château d’Eau (Toulouse), Le Pavillon Populaire (Montpellier), Atlantic Center of Photography (Brest), Stieglitz19 Gallery (Belgium), PhotoPhnomPenh (Cambodia ), Noorderlicht Photofestival (Netherlands), Les Rencontres Internationales de la Photographie (Arles), Singular Images Festival (Sète).
His works are part of private and public collections including those of the National Library of France, the Château d’Eau, The Atlantic Centre of Photography. It is represented in Belgium by the Stieglitz19 gallery.
Having lived and worked for five years in London, he made many visits to the United States between 2003 and 2009 to achieve the Pursuit series, which is co-published the monograph by Journal and Filigranes in 2012. Winner of the Residence The Photographic Eye urban, it does the job The Brothers-like in 2014, published by Watermarks.
His work has been exhibited in France and abroad, including: the Château d’Eau (Toulouse), Le Pavillon Populaire (Montpellier), Atlantic Center of Photography (Brest), Stieglitz19 Gallery (Belgium), PhotoPhnomPenh (Cambodia ), Noorderlicht Photofestival (Netherlands), Les Rencontres Internationales de la Photographie (Arles), Singular Images Festival (Sète).
His works are part of private and public collections including those of the National Library of France, the Château d’Eau, The Atlantic Centre of Photography. It is represented in Belgium by the Stieglitz19 gallery.