Vincent Munier (born 14 April 1976) is a French wildlife photographer and documentary filmmaker. Among his most notable works are his photographs of arctic wolves and snow leopards. He co-directed a film about snow leopards, The Velvet Queen (2021), which received the César Award for Best Documentary Film.
Life and work
Vincent Munier was born on 14 April 1976 in Épinal in Vosges, northeastern France.[1] He began to photograph animals in the Vosges forests and mountains at the age of twelve, aided by his father.[2][3] He went on to become a professional wildlife photographer.[1]
Munier prefers to create landscape photographs with animals that viewers might not discover immediately.[3] He is known for photographing in snow, which he likes due to the lighting associated with it, how it omits non-essential details from the image and the fact that animals manage to live in remote and harsh environments.[4] He is notable for his photographs of arctic wolves on Ellesmere Island in Canada, which he took during six years of expeditions, and became the basis for his photo-book Arctique (2015). His quest to photograph snow leopards began in 2011 and involved six trips to Tibet before he first encountered the animal in 2016.[3] It resulted in two photo-books about Tibet and snow leopards, Tibet : promesse de l'invisible and Tibet : Minéral animal, both published in 2018 and the latter with texts by the writer Sylvain Tesson who joined one of the expeditions.[2] Munier's quest for snow leopards is the subject of the documentary film The Velvet Queen (2021), which Munier co-directed with Marie Amiguet and which received the César Award for Best Documentary Film.[3][5] It is the subject of Tesson's book The Art of Patience, which also includes photographs by Munier.[3]
Munier received the Eric Hosking Award in 2000, 2001 and 2002. He was the first photographer to receive this award three times.[1]
Selected publications
Bibliography adapted from France Inter.[1]
- Le Ballet des grues, with Alain Salvi, 2000
- Le Loup, with Philippe Huet and Julie Delfour, 2003
- Tancho, with Zéno Bianu, 2004
- L'Ours, with Philippe Huet, 2005
- Blanc nature, with Lysiane Ganousse, 2006
- Clair de brume : Regards sur les Vosges, text by Laurent Joffrion, 2007
- Kamtchatka : La vie sauvage aux confins du monde, text by Anna Konevskaya, 2008
- Au fil des songes, with Michel Munier, text by Charlélie Couture, 2010
- De crépuscules en crépuscules, text by Pierre Pelot, 2011
- Arctique, 2015
- Tibet : promesse de l'invisible, 2018
- Tibet : Minéral animal : sur les traces de la panthère des neiges, text by Sylvain Tesson, 2018
References
- 1 2 3 4 "Vincent Munier" (in French). France Inter. September 2014. Retrieved 17 April 2022.
- 1 2 Chassepot, Philippe (29 September 2020). "Vincent Munier, à l'affût du merveilleux". Le Temps (in French). Retrieved 17 April 2022.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Jolly, Vincent (10 October 2021). "Dans les Vosges avec le grand photographe animalier Vincent Munier". Le Figaro (in French). Retrieved 17 April 2022.
- ↑ "Vincent Munier, Wildlife Photographer". tourisme-lorraine.fr. Agence Régionale du Tourisme Grand Est and Destination Lorraine. Retrieved 22 April 2022.
- ↑ Roxborough, Scott (25 February 2022). "'Lost Illusions' Wins Best Film at France's Cesar Awards". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
External links
- Personal website (in French)