Acclaimed photographer and filmmaker Vincent Munier presents his latest exhibition at Lyon's Musée des Confluences, focusing on awe-inspiring wildlife near his home in the Vosges mountains.
Category
🗞
NewsTranscript
00:00 Getting close to nature is the mantra of photographer and filmmaker Vincent Meunier.
00:07 He has traveled to the world's most remote regions, from the North and South Poles to
00:13 Tibet, snapping shots of the wildest animals on the planet.
00:18 His new exhibition at Lyon's Musée des Confluences is a dive into the forests he grew up with
00:23 in eastern France.
00:24 I learned how to dive and I can spend days and hours there. I am totally possessed by
00:31 this encounter, by this desire to highlight the animals, in a way that we have put aside
00:38 a little bit. That's what affects me the most.
00:41 It's how much we have advanced a little bit in solitaire. It's man and man and animals
00:48 in show, in accessories, but not in the same range. There is this vertical position that
00:54 annoys me a lot. This hegemonic position of our species on others.
00:59 The wild world is being gnawed away by man to the detriment of the flora and fauna.
01:06 Vincent Meunier wants to showcase the beauty of the planet, whether it comes from the other
01:10 side of the world or close to home.
01:12 It's been a long time since I've been travelling. It's my job, but I want to show that you
01:19 can have such an intense emotion when you see a snow panther as well as a lynx, a wild
01:26 cat or even a little mongrel. There are things that seem quite ordinary, but when you pay
01:33 attention, take your time and everything is brought together, the light and everything,
01:39 and it becomes extraordinary.
01:42 The Enforez exhibition is open to the public until 2025 at the Musée des Confluences in Lyon.
01:50 [Sound Effects]
01:57 [SWOOSH]