Following its debut at Paris Photo last year, London’s Cob Gallery returns to Paris Photo with a solo presentation by Jack Davison. This new body of work unites the artist’s lifelong passion for portraiture with his recent exploration of photopolymer gravure printing, a process that merges photography with the tactile depth of printmaking.
Cob, stand C32

Jeffrey Conley’s ethereal landscapes are showcased at Bildhalle’s, where you can also view classic works by Louis Stettner (1922-2016).
Bildhalle, stand D03

Fraenkel Gallery will display works by Robert Adams, Sophie Calle, Liz Deschenes, Lee Friedlander, Katy Grannan, Martine Gutierrez, Peter Hujar, Christian Marclay, Hiroshi Sugimoto, Carrie Mae Weems and others.
Fraenkel, stand B34

Magnum Gallery will present vintage prints by René Burri, Leonard Freed, Philippe Halsman, Sergio Larrain, Herbert List, Paolo Pellegrin, and Alex Webb; lifetime prints by Eve Arnold, Chris Killip and Marc Riboud; and contemporary works by Myriam Boulos, Raymond Depardon, Harry Gruyaert, Susan Meiselas and Alec Soth.
Magnum, stand C02

Clementine de la Feronniere will dedicate its booth to the notion of memory, with French-Spanish photographer FLORE transporting us into the intimate world of Polish composer Fryderyk Chopin with her narrative works.
There will also be rare prints by James Barnor that bear witness to Ghana in transition.
Clementine de la Feronniere, stand B31

Jackson Fine Art will present previously unreleased silver gelatin prints from Sally Mann’s seminal series At Twelve: Portraits of Young Women (1983-1985), a collective portrait of 12-year-olds on the verge of adulthood. (Don’t miss our interview with Sally Mann in B+W 308, on sale 13 November!)
Jackson, stand C10

A darkroom will be installed at Bigaignon’s booth, with a continuous live performance by master silver gelatin printer Renato D’Agostin, who will create his striking monochrome images on site.
Bigaignon describes the exhibited works as exploring a wide range of photographic processes — cyanotype, silver gelatin, chemigram, gum bichromate, tintype, and luminogram — through the distinct approaches of Chris McCaw, Yannig Hedel, Thomas Paquet, Rachelle Bussières, Rossella Bellusci, Harold Feinstein and Hideyuki Ishibashi.
Bigaignon, stand B29

As part of its fifth participation in Paris Photo, Alexandra de Viveiros Gallery will display works by Ukrainian photographer Oleksandr Suprun. His rare analogue collages from the 1970s-90s subvert Soviet iconography through poetic depictions of nature, elderly people and children.
Alexandra de Viveiros, stand D17

Michael Hoppen Gallery will explore the canon of street photography at this year’s fair. The gallery will unveil Sohei Nishino’s latest diorama map, Tokyo, 2024, for the first time, presented alongside his earlier cityscapes of New York and Paris.
There will also be a selection of vintage prints on show by masters such as Pál Funk Angelo, Nobuyoshi Araki, Eugène Atget, Brassaï, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Krass Clement, Masahisa Fukase, Kati Horna, Charles Nègre, Ishiuchi Miyako, Tod Papageorge, Shomei Tomatsu and Garry Winogrand.
Michael Hoppen, stand B41

In the Emergence sector, Brussels-based Hangar Gallery will present a solo show by Sylvie Bonnot. Her work, drawn from Burgundy to French Guiana, metamorphoses through material experimentation, unfolding on non-traditional surfaces that reflect the constant evolution of natural environments.
Hangar, stand M03

Exhibition: Looking Out, Looking In: Larry Fink and Rosalind Fox Solomon with Lisette Model
MUUS Collection brings together work by pioneering photographer Lisette Model with that of two of her students: Larry Fink and Rosalind Fox Solomon.
Model’s image of Valeska Gert is featured in the Elles x Paris Photo exhibition focusing on 38 women artists selected from the galleries present at the fair.

Three photographs by Eric Schwab (1910-1977) – taken during the liberation of the Dachau and Buchenwald concentration camps in 1945 – will be show at the stand run by CLAIRbyKahn gallery. This is the first time in the history of Agence France-Press that one of its photographers will be represented at this level at an international art fair.
Schwab’s images will be exhibited alongside works by Roger Ballen, Edward Kaprov, Shigeishi Nagano, Yves Samuel, Thomas Dworzak and Patrick Zachmann.
CLAIRbyKahn, stand C04

Cosmology: Crossed paths of seven women photographers today
This year’s Paris Photo will include a special session bringing together seven contemporary female photographers and visual artists: Marcelline Delbecq, Éléonore False, Marina Gadonneix, Agnès Geoffray, Constance Nouvel, Aurélie Pétrel and Stéphanie Solinas.

Paris Photo’s Book sector remains central to the fair. One of the headline titles is the second edition of the most comprehensive survey of Graciela Iturbide’s work to date. Co-published by Fundación Mapfre and RM, this new monograph covers five decades of the revered Mexican photographer’s poetic black & white imagery.
RM, stand J03

Among Radius Books’ offering is Sticks, a collection of photographs by James Florio who spent several years documenting the work of Patrick Dougherty, an artist who works with twigs, branches and movement to create his ephemeral large-scale outdoor sculptures.
The book features 16 of Dougherty’s projects from across the United States, photographed by Florio in black & white.

Also featured by the publisher are new releases from Mimi Plumb and Ryan McIntosh.
Radius Books, stand L04

Among the highlights from Polish publisher Blow Up Press is the world premiere of Homesick. New York by Michael Ackerman, a haunting meditation on memory and belonging.
Blow Up Press, stand K02

Stanley/Barker’s featured artists include Marjolein Martinot (interviewed in B+W 307). Her 2025 book, Riverland, features photographs taken in and around the waterways of southern France and is her poetic response to a difficult period in her personal life, compounded by the restrictions imposed by Covid.
Stanley/Barker, stand J08
See all the exhibitors and highlights at parisphoto.com