Jean-Michel Berts, Light of Venice, Pont 5, 2000, Sous Les Etoiles Gallery
Jean-Michel Berts, Light of Venice, Grand Canal 2, 2000, Sous Les Etoiles Gallery
Jean-Michel Berts, Light of Venice, Gondole, 2000, Sous Les Etoiles Gallery
Jean-Michel Berts, Light of Venice, Basilique Santa Maria della Salute, 2000, Sous Les Etoiles Gallery
Jean-Michel Berts, Light of New York, Greenwich Village, 2007, Sous Les Etoiles Gallery
Jean-Michel Berts, Light of New York, Brooklyn Bridge 1, 2007, Sous Les Etoiles Gallery
Jean-Michel Berts, Light of New York, Fire House, 2006, Sous Les Etoiles Gallery
Jean-Michel Berts, Light of New York, Flatiron Building, 2007, Sous Les Etoiles Gallery
Jean-Michel Berts, Light of New York, Gapstow Bridge, 2007, Sous Les Etoiles Gallery
Jean-Michel Berts, Light of New York, Central Park 1, 2007, Sous Les Etoiles Gallery
Jean-Michel Berts, Light of New York, Carnegie Hall, 2007, Sous Les Etoiles Gallery
Jean-Michel Berts, The Light of Paris, French Institut 1, 2005, Sous Les Etoiles Gallery
Jean-Michel Berts, The Light of Paris, Concorde Crillon, 2005, Sous Les Etoiles Gallery
Jean-Michel Berts, The Light of Paris, Place Vendome, 2005, Sous Les Etoiles Gallery
Jean-Michel Berts, The Light of Paris, Notre Dame Nuit, 2005, Sous Les Etoiles Gallery
Jean-Michel Berts, The Light of Paris, Luxembourg Garden, 2005, Sous Les Etoiles Gallery
Jean-Michel Berts, The Light of Paris, Chairs, Luxembourg Garden, 2005, Sous Les Etoiles Gallery
Jean-Michel Berts, The Light of Paris, Booksellers, 2005, Sous Les Etoiles Gallery

Press Release

Sous les Etoiles Gallery is thrilled to introduce a new series of black and white carbon pigment prints from the French photographer Jean-Michel Berts.  His unique vision of mystifying light compliments the carbon pigment’s rich deep blacks and infinitely subtle tonal variations.  The tactile surface quality of the prints pays homage to the handcrafted beauty of the early 20th-century Pictorialist movement.

Jean-Michel Berts began his Cities series nearly ten years ago, almost by accident.  "I was in Venice and the Piazza San Marco was flooded.  I didn’t plan to take any images, but the atmosphere was so exceptional that I could not resist," he remembers.  Returning to Paris, he discovered the film inside his camera was black and white, not color as he had thought.  It was at that moment when he rediscovered the pleasures of working in black and white.

Jean-Michel Berts collects the essences of cities in this body of work.  His glance is there to remind us of the grandeur of civilizations.  Whether Paris, New York, Venice, London or Tokyo, through his eyes these sublimated cities take on a poetic, ethereal and dreamlike value.  Jean-Michel Berts prefers to take pictures early in the morning because, as he likes to say, "during this period of time, crossing emotions, feelings and atmosphere, this is always when the images come to me."

This exclusive series of carbon pigment prints was printed in its entirety by Sous Les Etoiles Gallery.

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