Readers picks #208

08 October 2018   •  
Written by Anaïs Viand
Readers picks #208

Stéphane Goin presents a few images from his road trip across the United States, and Ilan Hassane works on the notion of plastic. These are our weekly readers’ picks.

Ilan Hassane

“To be understood without having to convince anyone

” is Ilan Hassane, an 18-year-old student’s goal. “When I take pictures, I like to lie and amplify the truth by using staging, lights and colours. I have never tried capturing anything faithfully”, he explains. By producing this series of self-portraits, Ilan tackles the subjects of environment and ecology with singularity. In his own way, Ilan has tried to express what plastic means to him: “his omnipresence and the irony of his destructive power”. “This material is locking us into our own distress, while enabling us to live a better life”, he adds.

© Ilan Hassane

© Ilan Hassane© Ilan Hassane

© Ilan Hassane

Stéphane Goin

To Stéphane Goin, 45, photography and travelling go in pair. “Between my jobs in advertising and editing, I try to jump on the first plane I catch and fly to start a road trip across the United States”. His latest project? Capturing all American states. To this day, he has visited them all but one: Hawaii. “I create little by little my own road map, seeking the American dream, or at least what’s left of it”, he tells us. As this project launched in 2007, has progressed, Stéphane has developed a thematic and geographical photography, always linked to the notion of memory. “Photography has always come naturally to me, to leave a mark, to produce a testimony on this country’s greatness”.

© Stéphane Goin© Stéphane Goin
© Stéphane Goin© Stéphane Goin

© Stéphane Goin

Explore
Readers picks #355
Readers picks #355
Alexander Kaller and Stephen Sillifant, our readers picks #355, both escape the frenzy of our world to produce peaceful images – a...
30 August 2021   •  
Written by Fisheye Magazine
British seaside, round animals and Céline Sciamma: Max Miechowski's Chinese portrait
British seaside, round animals and Céline Sciamma: Max Miechowski’s Chinese portrait
Trained as a musician, British artist Max Miechowski turned to photography after a long trip to Southeast Asia. Portraits...
25 August 2021   •  
Written by Lou Tsatsas
The labourer who turned mud into silver
The labourer who turned mud into silver
With Zilverbeek (Silver creek), Lucas Leffler explores the myth of a worker who made his wealth from the mud that lined the bottom of a...
23 August 2021   •  
Written by Finley Cutts
Readers picks #353
Readers picks #353
Our readers picks #353, Antonio Maria Storch and Claudia Fuggetti – both Italian – explore territories. The first offers a graphic vision...
16 August 2021   •  
Written by Lou Tsatsas
Our latest articles
View all articles
Readers picks #355
Readers picks #355
Alexander Kaller and Stephen Sillifant, our readers picks #355, both escape the frenzy of our world to produce peaceful images – a...
30 August 2021   •  
Written by Fisheye Magazine
British seaside, round animals and Céline Sciamma: Max Miechowski's Chinese portrait
British seaside, round animals and Céline Sciamma: Max Miechowski’s Chinese portrait
Trained as a musician, British artist Max Miechowski turned to photography after a long trip to Southeast Asia. Portraits...
25 August 2021   •  
Written by Lou Tsatsas
Instagram selection #312
Instagram selection #312
Through portraits or landscapes, the artists of our Instagram selection #312 never stop experimenting. All of them seek new textures and...
24 August 2021   •  
Written by Joachim Delestrade
The labourer who turned mud into silver
The labourer who turned mud into silver
With Zilverbeek (Silver creek), Lucas Leffler explores the myth of a worker who made his wealth from the mud that lined the bottom of a...
23 August 2021   •  
Written by Finley Cutts