Photographer Alexandra Dautel investigates an Israeli community, a kibbutz, created in 1989 in the middle of the Negev desert. After visiting the site, however, she discovered it was more like a school. Through extensive digital research, she exposes the ambiguity and violence of a place that at first glance seemed rather utopian. Interviews with present and past members reveal that some describe it as a cult. Using different points of view, the visual language of the book’s images – a mix of archival material, plans, documents, and Dautel’s own photographs – reflects the contradictions and complexities of the community and its history, as well as the gaps and grey areas.
228 pages.


twen [1959–1971]
Imagos - Noémie Lothe
Vacuité 9090 - Jérémy Piningre
Saint Ferreol - Trente plats - Jérémy Piningre & Aëla Mäi Cabel
Lazy Painter - Angela Gjergjaj, Jordi Bucher and Mirco Petrini
Pour une esthétique de l'émancipation - Isabelle Alfonsi
We want to look up at the Sun, but could the Sun be looking down on us? - Rudy Guedj & Olivier Goethals
Gruppen n°14 - Collectif
Fluent - Laëticia Donval 









