Céline Clanet (1977) was born and raised in the French Alps. A graduate from the Ecole nationale supérieure de la Photographie of Arles, she is interested in remote or secret places, wild landscapes, and their inhabitants. She has been working since 2005 on the European Arctic continental territory known as “Lapland”, its territory and inhabitants. Her “Máze” photographic series was awarded with several prizes in Europe and USA, including the Critical Mass Book Award (USA). She recently achieved “Kola”, a 5-year photo project about the Russian Lapland / Murmansk region, published at Loco editions.
Published and exhibited in internationally, her photographic work is part of the Collection Neuflize OBC (France), the Société Française de Photographie (France), the Archives Départementales de Savoie (France), the Portland Art Museum (USA) collections, as well as several private collections.
Céline Clanet published 6 monographs: “Kola” (Loco, France, 2018), “Accès Réservé” (ARDI Photographies, France, 2017), “Les Chapieux, Géographie d’un secret” (Actes Sud, France, 2014), “Des Barrages et des Hommes en Savoie” (Actes Sud, France, 2011), “Máze” (Photolucida, USA, 2010) and “Un Mince Vernis de Réalité” (Filigranes, France, 2005).
Céline lives and works in Paris.
About Máze – words by Céline Clanet:
Since 2005 I have been traveling regularly to Máze, a small Sámi village located at the highest point of the European map, far above the Arctic Circle, in Norwegian Lapland. There, I met quiet people, sometimes melancholic, captivating, who are very proud of their village and territory. They often have binoculars at hand, even in their homes, to gaze at these beautiful landscapes.
I have photographed Sámi people, houses, land and reindeer that were almost not here today. They barely escaped being flooded by the waters of a hydroelectric dam project that the Norwegian government planned in the early 1970’s and thanks to Sámi people’s protests and resistance was fortunately aborted.
But I have also photographed a reality that will undoubtedly transform in the coming century, due to global warming and cultural integration.
To me, Máze is an ambivalent symbol of resistance and helplessness.
Pride as well as suspicion, solitude and great beauty prevail there.
In the most beautiful tundra of the Arctic region, I tasted Ante’s and Ole Ailo’s favorite season, when days get longer and temperatures become milder. The perfect moment, when time doesn’t exist anymore and night is gone, when they immerse themselves in their favorite activities: fishing through ice holes in Lake Suolojávri and riding the snøskuter in the tundra. And all these hours spent with friends, family, outside on a reindeer skin, in a hytte* or under a lávvu*, talking, joiking*, or lying down doing nothing, saying nothing. Just being.