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The

Artist

Gaëlle Delort

Lives and Works in
Causse Méjean, in Lozère, France
Gaëlle Delort's photographic work is based on field research, informed by geomorphology, anthropology, literature and architecture. By collecting clues that make up the depth of a place and its landscapes, she explores the resonances between human and geological temporalities, playing on the tension between the depth of the world and the surface of images. Working mainly with a large-format camera, her practice echoes the temporalities of the geological phenomena she observes. She describes her approach as photographic infiltration, indicating a way of working with the territory. Since 2020, she has been combining her practice with caving. Her photographic, editorial and installation work explores the conditions under which images appear and the perception of landscapes. Gaëlle Delort was born in Aurillac in 1988 and graduated with honours from the École Nationale Supérieure de la Photographie in Arles in 2022. She lives in Causse Méjean, in Lozère (France).
Projects
2024

Développements (Developments)

In photography, development refers to the process of transforming a latent image into a visible image. In caving, development corresponds to the cumulative length of the interconnected galleries in an underground network. What can we see underground? What shapes can we recognise, and what stories do those that are still unknown to us tell? Through the exploration of a dozen natural cavities in the Occitanie region using a large-format film camera, and thanks to the insights and tools of geomorphologists, geologists, hydrogeologists and geoarchaeologists, Développements invites us to think of underground environments as infinite laboratories of visions, which continue to reveal the archives of the history of the Earth and its inhabitants. Work conducted in collaboration with scientists from the GET (Geosciences Environment Toulouse) and TRACES (Archaeological Research on Cultures, Spaces and Societies) laboratories, the SETE (Theoretical and Experimental Ecology Station) - CNRS in Moulis and the BRGM (Bureau of Geological and Mining Research) Occitanie.
2026

Karst

South of France’s Massif Central lie the limestone plateaus that form the Grands Causses region. Bordered by the deep valleys of the Tarn and Jonte rivers, the Causse Méjean is the highest of these plateaus. Its distinctive landscape, known as karst, is marked by the mechanical and chemical erosion of limestone rock. Water seeping through cracks in the surface of the plateau has created a unique topography, characterised by surface phenomena and an extensive network of underground cavities. These cavities, known locally as avens (or sinkholes), are chasms that open up in the ground. Varying in depth and appearance, they are mostly difficult to access, as they take the form of a vertical shaft over all or part of their length. Explored since Neolithic times for the resources they contain (water, calcite, clay), and once considered the entrance to Hell in a land where Catholicism predominated, these abysses and their exploration were brought to light in the 19th century by a young lawyer with a passion for geography. At the end of the century, when photography was invented, Edouard-Alfred Martel and his collaborators carried out numerous explorations in the Causses Majeurs region, thus contributing to its development as a tourist destination and to the foundation of modern speleology.
Gaëlle Delort
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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