Alexandre Silberman (born 1983) is a director and photographer based in Paris (France). Graduated in Philosophy and in Communication from LYON III University, he mainly works on documentary projects touching on the cultural and the societal, in relation to the research he conducted during his studies.
His photographic approach, along with his cinematic work, has developed around the analysis of the relationships between a place and those who cross it.
Hence was created the NEW CITY/NEW GOD series, which was centered around the place of religion in Brasilia and which was presented at the Red Bull Station in Sao Paulo (Brazil) in 2016.
In 2018, his series on scenography of Beauty in Ile-de-France museums, THE GREAT BEAUTY, was the subject of a monographic exhibition at the Moritzhof Gallery in Magdeburg (Germany).
This series was selected in 2019 to participate in the International Photography Festival of Lenzburg (Switzerland)
In 2020, Alexandre Silberman was shortlisted for the Bar Tur Photo Awards, the Palm* Photo Prize, and is one of the ten finalists exhibited in New York for the Feature Shoot Street Photography Awards. The same year, he was also exhibited at PHOTOIS:RAËL and during the 15th International Biennial of Photography NICÉPHORE +.
In 2021, he will be part of the selection of the festival LES BOUTOGRAPHIES in Montpellier.
Differences and Repetitions – Aesthetics of disappearance and overlaying in Seine-Saint-Denis
“My territories are beyond grasp, and not because they are imaginary, but on the contrary, because I am in the process of outlining them.”
– Gilles Deleuze and Felix Gattari, A Thousand Plateaus
Established in 1968 for the purpose of fragmenting the Île-de-France’s “red belt,” the Seine-Saint-Denis department was formed in a way that simultaneously attached it to and isolated it from Paris. Ideologically split from the concomitant capital, it was also demographically, economically, and culturally so, all while still being “the periphery of.” In opposition to Paris’s immutable heritage, the area asserted its own identity through its heterogeneity, the plurality of its voices, and the radicalness of its mutations.
As the 2024 Olympic Games loom, of which it is one of the biggest beneficiaries, the Seine-Saint-Denis finds itself caught up in monumental building sites, whose scope contrasts with the reality on the ground.
Former vast agricultural plains that have become the most extensive industrial area in Europe, it is now suffering from its early urbanization.
The most cosmopolitan department, but also the poorest in mainland France, it is also one of the youngest. Facing a prominent past and a difficult current situation, Seine-Saint-Denis is entering the 2020s with lofty ambitions for the future.
At a time when an army of cranes are working the ground just as much to build a shiny future as to bury an annoying present, it is an entire territory which makes its strata appear to our eyes. Agricultural and industrial, natural and urban, poor and opulent, all these asynchronous layers make up a complex landscape, both spatial and temporal, crossed by a constant balance of power. That opposing the morbid repetition of the identical, of the established order and to re-establish, and the vigorous repetition of the difference, that of the life that disappears and springs again.
Here, the latter has never seemed so beautiful.
But it has also, unfortunately, never seemed so fragile.
To view more of Alexandre’s work please visit their website.