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Lucio is a photograph from the series "Chiapas," taken in Chiapas, a state of Mexico, in 2004. This trip to Zapatista territory changed the course of my life and made me discover the part of the Other that is in me. I left with a group of medical students who were going to do prevention work within the Oventic caracol, the political organ of the autonomous Zapatista movement. Every day I saw Lucio who lived in the Guadalupe Tepeyac clinic, in a room… nearby. We all lived collectively. I saw him sewing burgundy uniforms every day for all the Zapatista doctors at the clinic. He never told me why, until the day there was the Declaration of Good Governance and I saw everyone wearing it for the occasion. Lucio was a bit of a confidant of mine, we could both philosophize, I photographed him so as not to forget him and to continue to bear witness to the Zapatista revolt.
Bérangère Goossens She who loves / Photographing inner life / Traveling through space and time Born in 1979, I grew up in a small village in Seine-et-Marne, far from everything but close to nature. With a master's degree in documentary filmmaking, I pursued my studies first in cinema at Paris 8 University, then in sociology in Nancy, and finally in anthropology on Réunion Island. My artistic training has been equally diverse: theater, painting, photography, video, writing, materials, textures, media, and set design. My self-taught journey has spanned 30 years. In 2003, my trip to Chiapas in Mexico to visit the Zapatista Indians marked a turning point in my life. In my work, I seek simplicity. I have a restrained approach to reality; it seems to me that small things are remarkable, and I focus my gaze on their strength to reveal them. I like to follow the lines of my inner self and translate them into images.