Michel Vanden Eeckhoudt.
Exhibition catalog, Museum of Photography in Charleroi, 2022.

Michel Vanden Eeckhoudt.

Museum of Photography in Charleroi and Le Bec en l'air
Regular price €55,00 €0,00 Unit price per
N° d'inventaire 25324
Format 24 x 30.5
Détails 348 p., black and white photos, publisher's hardcover.
Publication 2022
Etat Nine
ISBN 9782367441658
Michel Vanden Eeckhoudt was born in Brussels in 1947. He began studying photography at La Cambre in 1967 and quickly began working for a motorsport magazine.
He has been a member of the VU agency since its creation in 1985. Along with his committed journalism, he became interested in zoological gardens, which he photographed in Europe and the United States, fascinated by the theatrical aspect of these places: those who look, those who are looked at, all looked at by the photographer.

His career as a photographer has led him to numerous exhibitions and to conduct, alone or in collaboration, photographic missions on various themes in Tunisia, Nepal, Israel, Morocco, and Egypt. Michel Vanden Eeckhoudt has also worked for Libération, turning his gaze and lens on the world of work, wherever it may be.

He died in 2015.

Texts by Xavier Canonne, Michel Poivert and Mary van Eupen.
Michel Vanden Eeckhoudt was born in Brussels in 1947. He began studying photography at La Cambre in 1967 and quickly began working for a motorsport magazine.
He has been a member of the VU agency since its creation in 1985. Along with his committed journalism, he became interested in zoological gardens, which he photographed in Europe and the United States, fascinated by the theatrical aspect of these places: those who look, those who are looked at, all looked at by the photographer.

His career as a photographer has led him to numerous exhibitions and to conduct, alone or in collaboration, photographic missions on various themes in Tunisia, Nepal, Israel, Morocco, and Egypt. Michel Vanden Eeckhoudt has also worked for Libération, turning his gaze and lens on the world of work, wherever it may be.

He died in 2015.

Texts by Xavier Canonne, Michel Poivert and Mary van Eupen.