2025 Denis Roussel Awards
Catherine Couturier Gallery is delighted to present “70 Moths”, an exhibition of new work by gallery artist Kate Breakey, featuring over 70 intimate portraits of moths. Kate Breakey ‘s latest work presents the delicate beauty of these often-unnoticed animals. Her lens invites the viewer to reflect on the vital role moths play in our… Read More
Rfotofolio is pleased to share the work of Amber Dietz. Would you please tell us about yourself? My name is Amber Dietz. I’m a photo-based artist and educator in Detroit, Michigan. I am the founder of Detroit Tintype, a tintype studio and workshop space located on Detroit’s East side. Along with my own artistic… Read More




Billy Hooper/ Diana Bloomfiel The young men that became our fathers. Please click on image to see a different view. Thank you to everyone who shared their pictures with us.

To learn more about these artist please click on their names. Zia Ayub Agnès Courrault Eduardo Fujii Marcy Palmer Jack Wasserbach
Today we are revisiting Lisa Nebenzah’s work and words. Lisa was the 2023 Denis Roussel Award recipient. “I love this work for all of the languages it is speaking and for the obvious love of the craft on display. In a contemporary context, your work is profoundly emotional, lighter than air, moisture laden, and ironically,… Read More

Henri Blommers was the 2022 Denis Roussel Award Winner. “Your work is quite wonderful and as anyone deeply connected to nature knows, there are no straight lines and it is the flaws that are beautiful and special. The fake truths that you write about are the real aberrations and have nothing to do with… Read More
The 2021 Denis Roussel Award Diana Bloomfield Cyanotype / Gum Bichromate / Handmade books “Such accomplished and beautiful work… precise, playful, clearly loved in the process of making. What I truly enjoyed was how many ways this work might be experienced in person especially if given the permission to hold and move the… Read More
“Photography is a way of feeling,of touching,of loving. What you have caught on film is captured forever… It remembers little things, long after you have forgotten everything.” Aaron Siskind