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The

Artist

Lives and Works in
Marseille
Emma Tholot is a visual artist and photographer. Her multifaceted practice combines photography, video, textile, wax, and metal, exploring how images, materials, and objects connect intimacy with collective staging. Her work draws on daily and ancestral rituals as well as a family heritage, intertwining the memory of heterotopic spaces, the materiality of desire, and systems of belief. From costumes to ex-voto, through references to theater, carnival, circus and their archetypal figures, everything points toward the baroque idea of a display of affects that puts into crisis the established order. Through stratification, veiling, and photographic transfers, her work presents images in a fragile, ghostly state, suspended between appearance and disappearance. Born in Saint-Étienne in 1994, she graduated from the École nationale supérieure des Arts Décoratifs, Paris (2020), the Accademia di Belle Arti di Roma (2018), and the École d’art d’Annecy (2016).
Projects
2024

Piccole Passioni

Baroque means “irregular pearl,” from the Portuguese Barocco. If it is irregular, it embodies caprice, fantasy, and freedom of invention. In an era of doubts and fears, the convulsive and exalted art of the Baroque emerged. If it still moves us today, isn’t it because, in the face of disaster and terror, we feel far from safe? The example of Naples, a city resistant to bourgeois order, embodies the Baroque intuition. The very feeling of life, the hereditary memory of volcanic eruptions and earthquakes, the fear of death, the gesticulation, the union of the funereal and the voluptuous, the theatricalization of every moment of existence… the restless, feverish, and superstitious city prefers what pleases to what is certain. Through Piccole Passioni, the aim is to explore a contemporary relationship to belief, superstition, and collective and individual fears, but also to the performance of the self in an era marked by spectacle. This work examines the intensity of signs, the passages between visible and invisible, between sacred and profane. It is rooted in an interest in the aesthetics of the Italian Baroque and its key motifs: the mask, the veil, concealment, identity in perpetual transformation. Beneath the mask, behind the veil, a paradoxical truth emerges: we are never more ourselves than in metamorphosis. A non-exhaustive list of Baroque motifs: stars, eggs, bulls, rural and marine landscapes, angels with butterfly wings, flies, masks, garlands, pearls, festoons, veils, clouds, capitals, rosettes, shells, she-wolves, flames, atlantes, putti, silver fish, horses, cherubs, meringues, syrups, plaster, cream. Nothing that concerns the mouth should remain foreign.
2025

Forever Blur

Forever Blur is an ongoing series that examines contemporary dispositifs of belief and memory. By slowing down the regime of photographic visibility, the project proposes a sensorial experience of the image as an object of vigilance, projection, and reminiscence. The series explores intermediary spaces - dressing rooms, backstage areas, sites of withdrawal -conceived as transitional zones imbued with intimate and collective traces. Positioned on the margins of dominant narratives, these spaces function as everyday heterotopias: devoid of bodies yet inhabited by memory. Nourished by a utopian, magical imagination rooted in the visions of a clairvoyant grandmother, they become sites of (re)claiming power - symbolic, individual, collective, and political - where the plastic work unfolds as a moving memory, shaped by reuse, ambiguity, and resonance. Through photographic transfers onto wax and textile, the project develops objects situated between image, sculpture, and costume. The images stage veils, garments, puppets, ribbons, and armor, conceived as second skin. Wax, an organic, sensitive material close to the body, slows the image down, holding it in a fragile state of appearance, between revelation and dissolution. Textile, as a supple and porous support, extends this relationship to the body: it absorbs, distorts, and inscribes the image within a domestic and ritual register. Inspired by wax ex-voto from Southern Italy, this work conceives photography as a deposit, not as proof of an event, but as the survival of a presence. In dialogue with the writings of Georges Didi-Huberman, the image is understood as an intermittent apparition, traversed by layers, folds, and erasures. Through plays of thickness, stratification, and opacity, the transfer technique intensifies the image’s ghostly, spectral dimension.
Emma Tholot
was nominated by
Centre photographique Rouen Normandie
in
2026
Show all projects
Each year every member of the FUTURES European Photography Platform nominates a set of artists and projects to become part of the FUTURES network.

While each artist has their own specific approach, they all address the question of the document and the photographic image as a place of memory or even belief.

With Gaëlle Delort, it is the landscape of the Causses, where she lives, that is revealed through a long-term exploration using a view camera. Combining speleology with her photography practice, she captures the geomorphology of the region in striking underground landscapes. Venturing into places beneath the ground we walk on, she methodically probes and records the other side of the world, where the archives of the earth lie.

It is the memory of human beings and their artefacts that Lívia Melzi seeks to highlight. Starting with the archives of the National Museum of Rio de Janeiro, destroyed by fire in 2018, she is also pursuing a long and extensive project of gathering material from the reserves of ethnographic museums. Based on these traces of the past, the Franco-Brazilian artist questions the future of their photographic collections.

Sediments of beliefs, the photographic image gains a range of forms borrowed from the field of popular Mediterranean tradition in Emma Tholot's work. Her installations blend theatrical elements from religion, carnival and the circus. Migrating onto fabric, embellished with ribbons, bells, wax ex-votos, cushions and satin, the photographic image is the crucible of a collective memory with a baroque accent.

Finally, the photographic document as deployed by Valentin Valette is shaped by his background in visual anthropology. The Franco-Algerian artist carries out photographic projects in the Gulf countries and is particularly interested in present-day Oman. In a large fresco combining documents, sound and photographs, he portrays migrant builders and entrepreneurs, and, isolated in vast desert landscapes, architectures that could be from the distant past or far-off future. Capturing faces and traces, he depicts a territory in transition, criss-crossed by migrations whose embodied lives are often erased, and patiently builds an archive of the time that once existed beneath these infrastructures of concrete and solar panels.

The members of the jury:

Marie Magnier, Director of Filles du Calvaire gallery

Valérie Cazin, Director of Binome gallery

David Benassayag, Co-director of Le Point du jour art center

Fannie Escoulen, Independent curator, co-founder of Le Bal, Paris

Nathalie Giraudeau, Director of Centre Photographique d’Ile-de-France

Claire Tangy, President of Centre photographique Rouen Normandie

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