Les Nouveaux Constructeurs (
The New Builders) is a striking body of work by French photographer Stéphane Couturier, first exhibited at the Fernand Léger National Museum in 2018. Conceived as a visual dialogue with Léger’s monumental painting
Les Constructeurs, Couturier’s series pays homage to the spirit of labor, invention, and progress that defined the Machine Age. Just as Léger celebrated France’s working class and the universal drive to build, Couturier reinterprets this modernist vision through the lens of twenty-first-century industry and technology.
For this series, Couturier employed the distinctive technique he developed in his earlier
Melting Point works, digitally merging two separate images into a single, cohesive composition. In
Les Nouveaux Constructeurs, photographs of the bridges and steel structures of the Mediterranean port city of Sète are intricately interwoven with fragments of Léger’s art. The resulting images pulse with movement and color, echoing the rhythmic dynamism of modernist painting while reflecting the power and complexity of contemporary industrial life. The dialogue between steel and pigment, form and abstraction, evokes the Constructivist photocollages of
Aleksander Rodchenko—another artist who, like Léger, celebrated the human and mechanical energy of modern times.
By juxtaposing Léger’s bold visual language with his own imagery of modern France, Couturier bridges two eras of creation. His compositions reveal how the optimism of early modernism continues to resonate amid today’s globalized landscape of trade, construction, and transformation. Through this fusion of past and present,
Les Nouveaux Constructeurs becomes a meditation on humanity’s enduring impulse to build—to shape the world with vision, ambition, and ingenuity. Born in 1957 in Neuilly-sur-Seine, Stéphane Couturier lives and works in Paris, continually expanding the possibilities of photographic form and the art of visual construction.
Image:
Les Nouveaux Constructeurs, Sète - Pont Sadi-Carnot n°03, 2018
C-Print
49 × 59 in.
Edition of five © Stéphane Couturier