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Josephine Brueder

Joséphine Brueder is a Parisian photographer, a graduate of the École de Condé (2016) and the University of Paris VIII (2013). For the past eight years, she has worked as a photographer for the City of Paris, where she designs and produces images for various institutional media.
Her practice revolves around observing our relationships with our material and digital environments. She travels through diverse territories in search of visible traces left by humans, in order to question the place of images in space and their social function. In her photographs, people and objects intertwine with the landscape, sometimes merging with it, sometimes contrasting with it: they seem to emerge from nature or dissolve into it, as if swallowed or cast back onto its surface. This fusion blurs our bearings and challenges our perception of reality. Her images invite the viewer to question not only what they see, but also their sensory and symbolic relationship to the environment, exploring this ambiguous boundary where humanity and nature meet.

Josephine Brueder's photography is fueled by her keen sense of observation. Working with film, she photographs Italy, Brazil, and France with a precise eye, attentive to the geometry of everyday life. Between gentle irony and contemplation, her images claim a lineage from Martin Parr as much as from Luigi Ghirri.

Sunday-Paris