Anne-Laure Autin

  • Portfolio
  • Bio / CV
  • Contact
  • Investment

Blood Line – Monograph

February 21, 2017 By Anne-Laure Autin

I’m so very excited to announce the launch of my first monograph, Blood Line! (so excited I used Bold type which I’ve never done before!)

Kris Graves from Kris Graves Projects in New York contacted me after he saw a preview of my new body of work. He suggested we make a book together. I was a bit stunned – the series wasn’t even completed yet. But he had trust in the work. The past few weeks have been a bit crazy for sure. And today, we have a book! The design is finalised and I love it – I can’t wait for it to be revealed when it is out!

This past year has had its share of really high ups and really low downs for me. This is another moment where I wish my dad were here. My step-mom reminded me the other day of how impressed he was with what I had done with my life and work in the past 18 months – and my dad wasn’t easily impressed. I can just imagine his face had he heard that Blood Line was now also a book! I think he would have been just as excited as I am 🙂

Kris has all the details on his site and we are currently taking pre-orders for the next 30 days. To get your copy, just head over to Blood Line on KGP.

I want to thank Kris for this opportunity. And anyone who will get the book. Really, thank you – what an amazing way it is for me to honor my dad’s memory.

Filed Under: Current work, Press, Awards and other News Tagged With: anne-laure autin, blood line, book, conceptual photography, fine art photography, netherlands

Blood Line

February 7, 2017 By Anne-Laure Autin

Today I release my latest body of work. I feel many things at the moment, mostly emotions linked to seeing a year’s worth of labour coming to fruition. I am particularly proud of Blood Line. So are my daughters. Working on it together was a shared pleasure, also because we felt connected to my Dad when we did. Right now however I do experience a little tightening of the chest (or is it of the throat?) as the grief is still fresh. But I remind myself that when he saw the photographs a few weeks before his death, he loved them. I wish he were here. I think he would have been proud too.

Blood Line – Artist Statement

Once your parents pass away, you realise you’re next in line. My father was diagnosed with terminal cancer at the tender age of 64. In “Blood Line” I investigate how his inescapable disease and his death also affected my own life. I saw my father’s pain and felt my own. My subjects are my daughters, my flesh and blood, his descendants. He experienced, I processed, they embody.

With this work I address how terminal illness turns our lives upside down and affects communication and identity. When I was with my dad, he and I knew his days were numbered. I was able to say things I might not have shared before, but I also found myself withholding private thoughts. My version of reality and truth shifted. Blood Line illustrates the ensuing coding of language and our morphing sense of Self.

Life as I knew it was radically redefined and my personal definition of a photograph evolved. In much of the work, I altered the surface of my pigment ink prints with the medical supplies that overtook our lives, such as gauze, suture thread, eosin…, even my own blood that I drew from my fingers. I cut the prints with scalpels and tore them by hand. By lineage, I am the literal link between my father and my daughters. Now I am also that link through the work of my hands. A year later, he is gone, and when I am too, the photographs will still be there to connect us all.

Blood Line is a limited edition of 6+2AP.

All photographs below are photographs of the actual prints.

​Torn. Pigment ink prints, high gloss varnish.​ 2017. 16×24″ / 40x60cm
Fluff. Pigment ink print, hand-stitched gauze. 2017. 12×16″ / 30x42cm
Broken. Pigment ink print. 2017. 12×16″ / 30x42cm
Gravity. Pigment ink print, hand-stitched pills. 2017. 12×16″ / 30x42cm
Tub. Pigment ink print. 2017. 16×24″ / 40x60cm
All I see. Pigment ink print. 2017. 16×24″ / 40x60cm
Growth. Pigment ink print, non-dissolvable suture thread. 2017. 12×16″ / 30x42cm
Infinite Loop. Pigment ink print, my blood. 2017. 16×24″ / 40x60cm
Prescription (33 pills a day). Pigment ink print, scratched with eosin. 2017. 12×16″ / 30x42cm
They dwell. Pigment ink prints, photo-montage. 2017. 13×15″ / 33x38cm
Salt Solution. Pigment ink print, IV line. 2017. 24×36″ / 60x90cm
I wish I knew. Pigment ink print, dissolvable suture thread. 2017. 16×24″ / 40x60cm
Sesame. Pigment ink print. 2017. 8×12″ / 20x30cm
I nearly lost my mind. Pigment ink print, surface cut by scalpel. 2017. 12×16″ / 30x42cm
Don’t die. Pigment ink print. 2017. 24×36″ / 60x90cm
Fade. Pigment ink print, bandage and my blood. 2017. 8×12″ / 20x30cm
Lights out. Pigment ink print, surface modified with medical tape and my blood. 2017. 12×16″ / 30x42cm

Filed Under: Current work Tagged With: anne-laure autin, blood line, conceptual photography, fine art photography, netherlands

Honorable Mention for Pulse at the NYC4PA

February 2, 2017 By Anne-Laure Autin

I’m very honoured to hear that Pulse was awarded a Honorable Mention in the Black & White 2016 of the New York Center For Photographic Art, jurored by Mark Sink!

Click here to see the whole gallery.​ 

Filed Under: Exhibits, Press, Awards and other News

Locked-in on Bokeh Bokeh

January 20, 2017 By Anne-Laure Autin

Thrilled to see Locked-in featured on BokehBokeh.photo today!

Filed Under: Press, Awards and other News

Tributes to my father

December 1, 2016 By Anne-Laure Autin

It is with infinite sadness that I share the passing of my father, Jean-Luc Autin, who closed his eyes for the last time last week on November 22nd. He fought in his last year a courageous battle against a cancer that we always knew to be terminal.

I posted a public tribute to him on the day of his passing on my personal facebook page, I have spoken at his service on Monday, please forgive me as I do not find the strength to do it again here today. Suffice to say that we & I loved him, tremendously.

I want to thank once more all of you who have written me, comforted me and shown me affection. I hope you will know how much I appreciate it.

When we heard about the diagnosis just over a year ago, our lives changed. After a few months, I started a new conceptual body of work called Blood Line. It addresses how terminal illness changes both communication and identity. I am almost done with it, it will be released soon and I have recently shared a sneak peek. But a few weeks ago, I submitted the photo Fluff to two organisations that I love, the Center for Fine Art Photography (C4FAP) in Fort Collins, Colorado and Don’t Take Pictures. I guess I wanted to gauge first impressions. 

I heard on Wednesday last week that Don’t Take Pictures was including Fluff in its Masks exhibit, which is on view till February 21st. It was the day after his passing. Yesterday I heard that Fluff will also be part of the Signature Image exhibit at the C4FAP, from March 3rd till April 1st. I am honored and humbled by both news.

I absolutely did not want to document my father’s cancer and I approached this work looking for more universal viewpoints. But I do not forget that it comes from an incredibly personal experience – that this works also stems from him, that it was made about and for him. It therefore feels like an incredible gift from the C4FAP and Don’t Take Pictures to see that Blood Line is already out there in the world thanks to them. They have given me an opportunity to honor my father’s memory this way as well and I am deeply grateful.

 
Fluff. Pigment ink print, hand-stitched gauze.

Filed Under: Current work, Exhibits, Personal

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • …
  • 11
  • Next Page »

Categories

  • Current work
  • Exhibits
  • Experimental work
  • Others
  • Personal
  • Press, Awards and other News
  • Uncategorized

“Primary Source” show

Blood Line at the MoMA Art library

Happy 2019!

Musée Magazine Woman Crush Wednesday

Blood Line on Artsy with Patricia Conde Galeria

Copyright © 2025 Anne-Laure Autin