By Christophe Jacrot
Publisher: teNeues
Publication date: January 2026
Print length: 208 pages
Language: English
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Christophe Jacrot: Winterland: The Colors of Snow offers a quiet immersion into winter as both landscape and state of mind. Published in January 2026, the book gathers photographs that suspend time, capturing snow not as spectacle but as atmosphere. Jacrot approaches winter with restraint and patience, allowing stillness, silence, and subtle transformation to shape each image. His photographs invite the viewer to slow down, to inhabit the pause that winter naturally imposes on the world.
Snow, in Jacrot’s work, is never merely white. It absorbs color, reflects memory, and softens the edges of reality. Urban streets dissolve into hushed tableaux, while open landscapes stretch toward abstraction, reduced to texture, light, and tone. Whether photographing a city caught in snowfall or a remote, unmarked expanse, Jacrot reveals winter as a fragile balance between presence and disappearance. Each scene feels fleeting, as though it might vanish moments after being seen.
Known for his long-standing engagement with weather as a central subject, Jacrot continues a photographic tradition that treats natural phenomena as expressive forces rather than backdrops. His attention to falling snow, drifting mist, and muted light echoes a painterly sensitivity, where composition and mood take precedence over description. The images do not document places so much as they evoke sensations: cold air on skin, muffled sound, the introspective calm that accompanies solitude.
There is a quiet melancholy running through Winterland, yet it is never heavy. Instead, it feels contemplative, even comforting. The landscapes suggest nostalgia for untouched spaces, but also acceptance of impermanence. Snow becomes a metaphor for time itself, covering, revealing, and erasing in equal measure. Jacrot’s work reminds us that beauty often resides in moments that cannot be held.
Through careful use of color, shadow, and atmosphere, Jacrot builds an emotional bridge between viewer and landscape. Winterland: The Colors of Snow is less about winter as a season than about winter as an experience: quiet, fleeting, and deeply human. It is a book to be returned to slowly, much like the snowfall it so poetically observes.