Piémanson beach, in the heart of the Camargue Regional Nature Reserve, welcomes thousands of summer visitors every year from all over France and Europe. These ephemeral visitors, who are far more than mere campers, set themselves up on the sand for several months, then move on at the end of the summer, leaving no trace.
At Piémanson, man listens to nature and has learnt to to cope alone again, to live with little. If the joy of returning remains intact, it is because Piémanson is the last wild beach in France, an island in the midst of a Mediterranean coastline that has been devoured by tourism. This "little beach of diehards", which lives for four months with none of the basic commodities, has reinvented a certain form of living together.
Piémanson is elusive for the photographer too. I consciously moved away from journalism and have tried, through small tableaux, evocative of a staged form of photography not actually used, to breathe a poetic feel into the documentary subject matter.
Loading
Comments
Sign up or log in to post something
Log in to your account
Sign up: It's free and anyone can join.
Verify your account
Nearly there! We've sent you an email – just click on the link in the email to verify your account and you'll then be a fully fledged member of IdeasTap.
If you can't find the email in your inbox, check your spam folder - if it's in there, save the address in your contacts. That way you'll always get our emails.
If you're still having problems, email us at info@ideastap.com.