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.


L'inventaire des destructions - Éric Watier
Délices d’Orient - Sarah Vadé
L'abécédaire d'un typographe - Gerrit Noordzij; Jost Hochuli
SKKS - Gilles Pourtier
Odette - Benoît Le Boulicaut
Le corps travesti - Michel Journiac
Manifeste d'intérieurs ; penser dans les médias élargis - Javier Fernández Contreras
Radio-Art - Tetsuo Kogawa
Roven n°4
Zoom Age - Julien Auregan
Piano - Joseph Charroy
Graphure et Peintrisme n°2 - B. Bonnemaison-Fitte, G. Pithon et M. Kanstad Johnsen
Amos Gitai et l'enjeu des archives - Jean-Michel Frodon
Une idéologie pour survivre – Débats féministes sur violence et genre au Japon - Ueno Chizuko
Voir la Palestine, Contre-champs artistiques - Stefanie Baumann
Prose postérieure - Les commissaires anonymes
La peinture c'est comme les pépites - Pierre Yves-Hélou + Tirage
Seoul Flowers & Trees - tribute to Lee Friedlander 









