Latitudes arrives at the International Center of Photography as a vivid testament to cultural exchange and the widening of global photographic dialogue. Created in partnership with the Fondation d’entreprise Hermès and the Fondation
Henri Cartier-Bresson, the exhibition’s newest chapter turns its attention to Côte d’Ivoire, presenting fresh work by laureates Nuits Balnéaires and François-Xavier Gbré. Together, their projects offer distinct yet complementary visions shaped by memory, landscape, and the enduring pull of personal history.
Established in 2024, the Latitudes program extends the spirit of the former Immersion initiative by embracing a broader international lens. Each cycle focuses on a single country, inviting local photographers to propose new work. A jury selects one laureate, who receives support to produce a series that will travel from Paris to New York before returning home. This structure not only amplifies underrepresented artistic scenes but also reaffirms the value of geographic and cultural perspective in contemporary photography. Côte d’Ivoire, the program’s inaugural focus, sets the tone for a deeply engaged, globally connected approach.
Nuits Balnéaires brings to the exhibition a practice shaped by poetry, spirituality, and the ever-changing waters of the Gulf of Guinea. His work traces the rhythms of life, death, and the unseen spaces in between, creating images that feel suspended in a realm both real and imagined. With water as a recurring element, his photographs and films become meditations on ancestry, connection, and transition. His path—from fashion photography to international exhibitions—reflects an artist continually expanding the boundaries of his visual language.
François-Xavier Gbré approaches image-making through the lens of architecture and its layered histories. His work examines buildings and territories as living archives, revealing how political, social, and environmental forces shape collective memory. Whether documenting remnants of colonial eras or contemporary shifts in urban space, he constructs narratives grounded in place yet resonant far beyond it. His presence in major museum collections and global exhibitions underscores the breadth of his vision.
Together, these two artists embody the guiding principle of Latitudes: a commitment to elevating voices that broaden our understanding of the world through images rooted in their own histories and landscapes.
Image:
François-Xavier Gbré, Rubino, from the series Radio Ballast, 2024. © François-Xavier Gbré, ADAGP, Paris, 2025