Après L'été (After Summer)
Dublin Core
Title
Après L'été (After Summer)
Shelfmark - 686.ULAND.BADIN
Subject
Landscape - Urban
Description
When you grow up facing the sea, the feeling of the ocean never goes away.
What impressed me the most when we settled on the Basque Coast was the light and different changes of atmosphere, which proved to be even stronger off-season. The moment when the region becomes deserted of its seasonal tourists and, as for any seaside resort, when the ambiance becomes more serene and friendly.
The emotion that came from it was so powerful that I felt compelled to transcribe it into images.
I prefer the banality of daily life to the journalistic reporting of an imposed situation. The surreal atmosphere of cities emptied of their inhabitants after the first lockdown in 2020 gave off a fake impression of stillness, which stopped me from photographing. It would have been another approach, another subject all together. So, I decided to wait for life to return to normal before the project could resurface.
Unlike a trip, where we arrive at a destination with a blank gaze; walking the streets of a familiar environment becomes a challenge.
Confronting yourself daily with the same details and atmospheres, everything can seem almost too banal to be interesting. It is precisely this challenge that interested me: the simplicity of things, the fascinating aesthetic of everyday life.
My exploration was exclusively by foot for a specific time, and I noticed that I always stayed within a 4km* radius of my home.
This ritual became a journey with imaginary boundaries, leaving free rein to intuitions and chance as I walked.
As opposed to a testimonial, my approach was to decipher a defined field in space so as to extract its essence. A sort of cartography where light and emotion were my only guides.
Unintentionally, I polarized my eternal sources of inspiration: architecture, cinema and literature; reminding me of George Perec and what he called “l’infra-ordinaire”.
Discovering characters’ attitudes from the images I just took had become a daily pleasure when I came back from a day of shooting.
APRES L ÉTÉ (After Summer) is not a project about emptiness, but rather what is around it and within it. It’s about observing a fragment of reality as I see and feel it, without the pretension of telling any other story than the one you can make yourself by looking at the photographs.
What we really see and what we discover over time, simply by observing closer.
Roberto Badin
4km is the total distance from Copacabana Beach where I lived during my teens in Rio de Janeiro.
What impressed me the most when we settled on the Basque Coast was the light and different changes of atmosphere, which proved to be even stronger off-season. The moment when the region becomes deserted of its seasonal tourists and, as for any seaside resort, when the ambiance becomes more serene and friendly.
The emotion that came from it was so powerful that I felt compelled to transcribe it into images.
I prefer the banality of daily life to the journalistic reporting of an imposed situation. The surreal atmosphere of cities emptied of their inhabitants after the first lockdown in 2020 gave off a fake impression of stillness, which stopped me from photographing. It would have been another approach, another subject all together. So, I decided to wait for life to return to normal before the project could resurface.
Unlike a trip, where we arrive at a destination with a blank gaze; walking the streets of a familiar environment becomes a challenge.
Confronting yourself daily with the same details and atmospheres, everything can seem almost too banal to be interesting. It is precisely this challenge that interested me: the simplicity of things, the fascinating aesthetic of everyday life.
My exploration was exclusively by foot for a specific time, and I noticed that I always stayed within a 4km* radius of my home.
This ritual became a journey with imaginary boundaries, leaving free rein to intuitions and chance as I walked.
As opposed to a testimonial, my approach was to decipher a defined field in space so as to extract its essence. A sort of cartography where light and emotion were my only guides.
Unintentionally, I polarized my eternal sources of inspiration: architecture, cinema and literature; reminding me of George Perec and what he called “l’infra-ordinaire”.
Discovering characters’ attitudes from the images I just took had become a daily pleasure when I came back from a day of shooting.
APRES L ÉTÉ (After Summer) is not a project about emptiness, but rather what is around it and within it. It’s about observing a fragment of reality as I see and feel it, without the pretension of telling any other story than the one you can make yourself by looking at the photographs.
What we really see and what we discover over time, simply by observing closer.
Roberto Badin
4km is the total distance from Copacabana Beach where I lived during my teens in Rio de Janeiro.
Creator
Roberto Badin
Publisher
37.2
Date
2023
Format
Cover paper: Fedrigoni Tela Tinted
Title embossed / Sewn binding
Interior paper : Condat Perigord 170g
Title embossed / Sewn binding
Interior paper : Condat Perigord 170g
Book Item Type Metadata
Dimensions
27 x 23 x 3 cm
Number of Pages
160
Number of images
135
Edition Size
500
Place of Publication
France
Designer
Julie Dubos
Editor
Nicolas Huet Greub
Printer
In Portugal
ISBN
9782493072054
Website
www.robertobadin.com
URL Link to project
https://www.robertobadin.com/apres-lete
Where to buy
Yvon Lambert / 7L / Jeu de Paume / La Comète / Agnès B. / Maison Européenne de la Photographie / La Nouvelle Chambre Claire / Bookstore Biarritz / Deus Ex Machina /Cahier Central
Links to reviews
https://galeriejoseph.com/2023/03/24/splendeur-en-cote-basque-acumen-33/
https://fisheyemagazine.fr/article/apres-lete-roberto-badin-se-livre-a-un-voyage-en-terrain-connu/
https://openhouse-magazine.com/art-roberto-badin/
https://fisheyemagazine.fr/article/apres-lete-roberto-badin-se-livre-a-un-voyage-en-terrain-connu/
https://openhouse-magazine.com/art-roberto-badin/
Collection
Citation
RobertoBadin, “Après L'été (After Summer),” Photo Book Cafe Archive, accessed April 30, 2025, https://www.photobookcafe-archive.co.uk/items/show/686.