Twinning Exhibition

Artist Statement

TRAVELLING  PHOTOGRAPHER   Hervé Schneider

Travelling photographer, I’ve been based in the southern Vercors, in the beautiful Quint Valley, since 2020, after a bit of wandering around our little sphere. I’ve been in love with the Vercors for many years, but I’m full of other projects. For me, photography is my “Zen space”, my meditation, my moments of refocusing, a return to the essential, to the environment in which we live and which we “share”.

 

Bruno Robinne A resident of the Quint valley. After many years of drawing in his work as an architect, for some years now he has been concentrating on drawing the landscapes that surround and nourish him.
Roland Dehon is a Belgian-born artist from the Quint valley with an eclectic background. He has worked as a set designer for 27 years, including carpentry, sculpture, graphic arts and automaton engineering. Has produced many watercolours depicting his hang-gliding, paragliding and microlight flights Draws all aspects of the valley.
Roland Dehon is a Belgian-born artist from the Quint valley with an eclectic background. He has worked as a set designer for 27 years, including carpentry, sculpture, graphic arts and automaton engineering. Has produced many watercolours depicting his hang-gliding, paragliding and microlight flights Draws all aspects of the valley.
Bernard Fort: Stone buildings that seem to blend naturally into the landscape, serve as a gateway to rediscovering the skills, practices and ways of relating to the landscape and environment of the farmer-builders of the Quint Valley. Sometimes meticulously maintained, other times abandoned with their contents inside, as if frozen in time, these buildings also reveal the connection that the valley's inhabitants maintain today with this past.
Bernard Fort: Stone buildings that seem to blend naturally into the landscape, serve as a gateway to rediscovering the skills, practices and ways of relating to the landscape and environment of the farmer-builders of the Quint Valley. Sometimes meticulously maintained, other times abandoned with their contents inside, as if frozen in time, these buildings also reveal the connection that the valley's inhabitants maintain today with this past.