Jean-Marc Caimi

Jean-marc Caimi

#Photographe
French-Italian photographer and journalist, Jean-Marc Caimi works as a freelance for Redux Pictures. His pictures mostly cover humanitarian and social topics. In parallel, his career follows a series of intimate and more personal projects.

His latest works include stories about consequences over people and environment of pollution in contaminated areas in Italy, religious pilgrimages in the era of Pope Francis, the veterans of the war in Libya, the human rights violation in Azerbaijan, the refugees from North Africa in Lampedusa, the crisis in Greece, the Zimbabwean refugees illegally crossing the South African border in search of a new life and many others.

His reportages have been published worldwide in magazines and newspapers such as Time (International edition), Newsweek, ElleMen (China), The Sunday Times (UK), Le Monde Diplomatique (France, Italy), Internazionale, Il Manifesto (Italy), Panorama Economy (Italy), A-Magazinet (Sweden), Chatelaine (Canada), Taz (Germany), XL Repubblica (Italy), Private (Italy), Aorta (Poland).

He won the 2011 Ivrea Photo Festival, was short listed for the World Photography Award 2009. He has been selected and exhibited in the 2013 Delhi photo festival, won multiple prizes and exhibited at the 2013 PAA awards in Czech Republic, included for two years consecutively (2012/13) in the American Photography prize catalogue, He won the “Biennale di Videofotografia” in Alessandria (Turin), where his work where showcased. He has been exhibited during the Format Festival in Derby (UK), at the festival Entre Margens in Portugal and in Braga at the Encontros da Imagem with the personal project "Daily Bread", in France at the Mairie of 13me in Paris with "Urban Tiles, the new social housing in Rome", in London At The Tavistock Clinic Gallery with "Exodus, displaced people of Somalia", in Rome for the Festival Internazionale di Fotografia with "Track 1, the ghosts of train stations", in Capalbio, Tuscany with "Land, Freedom and Mafia".

He is the didactic director of a photography course dedicated to refugees and migrants living in Rome.