‘Who has not dreamed of seeing what the eye cannot grasp?’: Rencontres d’Arles comes to the south of France
Les Rencontres d’Arles 2024 presents over 40 exhibitions and nearly 200 artists, and includes the latest iteration of the BMW Art Makers programme

‘Beneath The Surface’ is how Les Rencontres d’Arles, the annual photography festival in the south of France, has defined 2024's impressive curation of over 40 exhibitions, presenting nearly 200 artists.
Sprawled throughout the city of Arles’ charming streets (and a collection of satellite shows across the region), works are exhibited in myriad unexpected contexts, from 12th-century chapels and cloisters to the upper floor of a Monoprix supermarket. Just like the heat of the local summer, photography has woven its way into the life of the city, open now until 29 September 2024.
Les Roncontres d'Arles 2024
‘Who has not dreamed of seeing what the eye cannot grasp?’ is a curious premise for a visual medium, but for artist Mustapha Azeroual and the curator Marjolaine Levy it became part of the framework from which they developed their exhibition ‘The Green Ray’. The works were conceived with the BMW Art Makers programme, which each year supports the creation of an experimental visual arts project, responsive to current social and environmental challenges.
Mustapha Azeroual and Marjolaine Lévy, from the series Green Ray
As you first enter the cavernous cloister that hosts the exhibition, you encounter a moment for pause, as a reflection of evolving colourful light bounces back to you from a palate-cleansing white wall. Following into the main space, two lenticular panopticons surround you with abstract sweeping landscapes of colour, alluding to a horizon that cannot be determined. It’s akin to the experience of being at sea, or atop a tall mountain at sunrise or sunset, with a near-infinite sky.
At an impressive 4m high, these shifting visions envelop us in a poetic sensory experience. Levy refers to the art historian Alexander Alberro, who believes that ‘the more works engage the viewer's nervous system, the more egalitarian they are’. She explains, ‘When a work acts on the eye, we are all equal. Insofar as Mustapha’s work is an optical and kinetic experience, there is no sense of hierarchy among the audience. We will see things differently depending on where we are and how our brain perceives the colours, but we will all have a physical experience. The challenge lies in our ability to represent this environmental reality in an abstract way. By doing so, we are witnessing the socialisation of art.’
Mustapha Azeroual and Marjolaine Lévy, from the series Green Ray
In a similarly levelling approach, each image was created from photographs taken by sailors crossing the Arctic, Indian, Pacific and Mediterranean oceans. This evolves the traditional individualistic authorship template for artistic creation to a method that is more congruent with the works' reverence towards the natural world.
Azeroual says, ‘I’ve never wanted to travel to take photographs… It didn’t make sense to generate pollution in order to capture the effects of human activity. When, for “The Green Ray”, we decided to work on the high seas, which is a little-explored area, it was obvious that I wasn’t going to set off on a boat for several months. It made more sense to use a community of sailors. As it was winter, few people were travelling. So, we used archive images. All of them were taken in identified areas that enabled me to map remote spaces, such as the Southern Ocean, where I have never been, and where I will probably never go.’
Wallpaper* Newsletter
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
Mustapha Azeroual and Marjolaine Lévy, from the series Green Ray
This immersion combined with a sensitivity towards resources extends beyond methods of production and into the presentation; furniture within the exhibition is made from eco-responsible materials by BMW designers, and the sceneographic structures can be reused in future exhibitions. ‘The Green Ray’ can be experienced in Arles until 29 September, after which it will travel to Les Voiles de Saint-Tropez, then to Art Basel Paris in October.
Cristina De Middel. An Obstacle in the Way [Una Piedra en el Camino], Journey to the Center series, 2021
Other highlights of this year's festival include Cristina De Middel’s ‘Journey to the Center’ which reframes the migration route across Mexico as a courageous and dynamic journey rather than a fearful escape. Addressing the often over-simplistic perspective taken, Middel uses a layered visual language of straight documentary, constructed images and archival material to do justice to the path’s complexity.
Cristina De Middel. Traveling Cloud [Nube Viajera], Journey to the Center series, 2021
Another must-see is Mo Yi’s work ‘Me in My Landscape’, which celebrates the self-taught artist's unusual approach to the photographic gaze – he would shoot from a camera behind his neck, or fixed to a stick, allowing him to photograph at ground level while walking. From his perspective as quite an outsider, Mo Yi’s works define a particular spirit of China’s social fabric in flux during the 20th century.
Mo Yi ( 救). Self-Portrait, 1m, from the series The Scenery Behind Me, 1988
Mo Yi ( 救). From the series Red Streets, 2003
As Photography Editor at Wallpaper*, Sophie Gladstone commissions across fashion, interiors, architecture, travel, art, entertaining, beauty & grooming, watches & jewellery, transport and technology. Gladstone also writes about and researches contemporary photography. Alongside her creative commissioning process, she continues her art practice as a photographer, for which she was recently nominated for the Foam Paul Huf Award. And in recognition of her work to date, listed by the British Journal of Photography as ‘One to Watch’.
-
Morgan announces nine limited editions of its Super 3 three-wheeler
The Super 3 Origins Collection assembles nine elaborate design specifications for the diminutive Morgan Super 3, drawing on the influences and inspirations that shaped this high-performance three-wheeler
By Jonathan Bell Published
-
Vipp’s new guesthouse in Latvia’s Salaca National Park is its cosiest to date
Danish design brand Vipp transforms a 19th-century Latvian riverside log cabin into its ninth guesthouse
By Sofia de la Cruz Published
-
Step inside Le Harlequin, an imaginative redesign of a Mumbai apartment
Le Harlequin by Design Hex is an imaginative redesign of a Mumbai apartment in the bustling Indian city's Lower Parel neighbourhood
By Daven Wu Published
-
Van Gogh Foundation celebrates ten years with a shape-shifting drone display and The Starry Night
The Van Gogh Foundation presents ‘Van Gogh and the Stars’, anchored by La Nuit Etoilée, which explores representations of the night sky, and the 19th-century fascination with the cosmos
By Amy Serafin Published
-
Marisa Merz’s unseen works at LaM, Lille, have a uniquely feminine spirit
Marisa Merz’s retrospective at LaM, Lille, is a rare showcase of her work, pursuing life’s most fragile, transient details
By Finn Blythe Published
-
Damien Hirst takes over Château La Coste
Damien Hirst’s ‘The Light That Shines’ at Château La Coste includes new and existing work, and takes over the entire 500-acre estate in Provence
By Hannah Silver Published
-
Tia-Thuy Nguyen encases Chateau La Coste oak tree in tonne of stainless steel strips
Tia-Thuy Nguyen’s ‘Flower of Life’ lives in the grounds of sculpture park and organic winery Château La Coste in France
By Harriet Quick Published
-
Paris art exhibitions: a guide to exhibitions this weekend
As Emily in Paris fever puts the city of love at the centre of the cultural map, stay-up-to-date with our guide to the best Paris art exhibitions
By Harriet Lloyd-Smith Published
-
Cyprien Gaillard on chaos, reorder and excavating a Paris in flux
We interviewed French artist Cyprien Gaillard ahead of his major two-part show, ‘Humpty \ Dumpty’ at Palais de Tokyo and Lafayette Anticipations (until 8 January 2023). Through abandoned clocks, love locks and asbestos, he dissects the human obsession with structural restoration
By Harriet Lloyd-Smith Published
-
Remembering Pierre Soulages (1919-2022), a pioneer of post-war abstraction
Pierre Soulages, the pioneering French printmaker, sculptor and ‘painter of black’, has died aged 102
By Diane Theunissen Published
-
Reclaim the Earth, urge artists at Paris’ Palais de Tokyo
We discover the group exhibition ‘Reclaim the Earth’, a wake-up call for humans to reconsider our relationship with the planet (until 4 September 2022)
By Amy Serafin Last updated