Ihr Browser ist veraltet. Bitte aktualiseren Sie auf Edge, Chrome, Firefox.
Journées photographiques de Bienne, 9.-31.5.2026

Cracheur de feu
Michel François

In this photograph entitled, Cracheur de feu, the body seems to recede in favour of breath itself, which becomes matter, volume, and landscape. The flame erupts like an extension of the living—an ephemeral sculpture suspended between performative gesture and elemental force. What takes centre stage is no longer the figure of the fire breather, but the act of breathing itself: a moment in which the interior of the body meets space, night, and image.

Pushed to the margins, the body dissolves into darkness, while fire becomes the true subject of the photograph. This reversal marks a fundamental shift: the image ceases to be a document of a spectacular act and instead becomes the very site of its transformation. Photography does not merely capture the flame—itproduces it, stages it, suspends it within an impossible temporality. It fixes the instant when heat turns into light, when breath becomes explosion, when respiration transforms into landscape.

Presented near the railway station and at the threshold of the festival, the work resonates strongly with the multiple crises and the acceleration that define our present. Like this incandescent breath, contemporary events—climatic, political, technological, social—unfold at a pace that exceeds our capacity to fully grasptheir scope and consequences. Something is happening, something is burning, even as its full meaning escapes us.

In this work, Michel François activates a constant tension between control and loss of control, between technical mastery and elemental force. This tension becomes a metaphor for a world in which humanity continues to act, produce, and attempt to dominate, while the forces it has unleashed increasingly surpass it. The flame embodies this ambivalence: at once the result of precise skill and the manifestation of an energy that resists total command.

Within the context of this 29th edition, Cracheur de feu enters into dialogue with the very history of photography—a medium born of light and perpetually threatened by it. The flame functions as a metaphor for the photographic apparatus itself: a source of revelation and clarity, but also of overexposure and destruction. Every image carries within it a potential burn, a zone of instability where the visible consumes itself as it appears.

The work thus unfolds as a meditation on photography as a limit experience—and, by extension, on our present condition. It is a space in which light, pushed to its extreme, approaches its own disappearance. Between appearance and erasure, image and event, The Fire Breather inscribes photography within an incandescent temporality, inviting the viewer not to contemplate what is controlled or explained, but what burns—too fast, too intensely—before our eyes.

Year of production: 1999

+ Read more- Afficher moins
Venue

La Rotonde

La Rotonde
Rue de la Gare 11
2502 Bienne

To the venue
Je vivrai pour toi
Calypso Mahieu
A Secret Utopia
Lucy Ridgard
Watch the Watchers!
Anita Cruz-Eberhard
In Vetta
Giorgia Piffaretti, Sophie Wright
La physionomie de l’âge
Alfred Samuel Maurer
Reaching for Dawn
Elliott Verdier
Downtown Corrida
Alban Lécuyer
Insights
Georg Aerni
Surveillance Panorama
Jules Spinatsch
Am Tag davor
Julian Salinas