Nuits Balnéaires, the second laureate of Latitudes

2025
Le messager 14, Eboro, 2025 © Nuits Balnéaires, Adagp, Paris, 2025
Adama et Awa, Eboro, 2025 © Nuits Balnéaires, Adagp, Paris, 2025
Le chemin qui monte et le chemin qui descend sont-le même chemin 1, Eboro, 2025 © Nuits Balnéaires, Adagp, Paris, 2025
Le chemin qui monte et le chemin qui descend sont-le même chemin 1, Eboro, 2025 © Nuits Balnéaires, Adagp, Paris, 2025
In 2025, Latitudes continues to shine a spotlight on the contemporary Ivorian photography scene, as Nuits Balnéaires becomes the second laureate of this programme conceived by the Fondation d’entreprise Hermès and its partners. Thanks to this support, Nuits Balnéaires has produced a new body of work centred on a metaphorical journey in search of his origins. The public will be able to discover the resulting series, “Eboro”, through three exhibitions and a publication.

For the Nzima and Agni-Bona peoples of Côte d'Ivoire, the term Eboro refers to the origin point of all humanity, a place to which our immaterial double returns at the end of our existence to join its ancestors. Ivorian photographer Nuits Balnéaires draws on this cosmogony to explore his own journey: in what ways have his ancestors influenced his identity, his choices and his experiences? This transgenerational meditation is at the heart of the project he developed with the support of Latitudes. In 2025, Nuits Balnéaires became the second laureate of this programme created by the Fondation d'entreprise Hermès to support the international photographic scene, and organised in partnership with the Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson in Paris and the International Center of Photography (ICP) in New York (United States).

A multidisciplinary visual artist and poet, Nuits Balnéaires retraced the history of his family and its particular cultural heritage, resulting in “Eboro”, a contemplative series infused with nostalgia that lends itself to introspection. Set against the backdrop of the Gulf of Guinea, Nuits Balnéaires stages this personal quest through a visual cartography and a hybrid narrative that blends images and objects created in collaboration with local craftspeople. In this way, “Eboro” functions as a tale, a metaphor for a deep reflection of the nature of our earthly existence.

Nuits Balnéaires was born in 1994 in Abidjan, where he also grew up. He chose his pseudonym, which could be translated as “Seaside Nights”, as an homage to the shore, a space where the natural elements express themselves fully. As part of the second edition of Latitudes – coordinated under the mentorship of David Campany, director of the ICP – Nuits Balnéaires will present his new series at the ICP in New York from January 29 to May 4, 2026, in a group exhibition with François-Xavier Gbré, laureate of the programme’s first edition. “Eboro” will subsequently be exhibited at the Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson in Paris from May 20 to October 4, 2026, before a third and final exhibition in Abidjan in 2027. The series will also be featured in a bilingual French-English edition, which will be co-published by Atelier EXB and the Fondation d'entreprise Hermès in January 2026.

Disciplines
Photography
Visual arts
Ivory Coast
The second laureate of the Latitudes programme, Ivorian photographer Nuits Balnéaires has created a sensitive and introspective series.
Nuits Balnéaires has retraced the history of his family and its particular cultural heritage, creating a visual cartography and a hybrid narrative.
As well as featuring in a dedicated edition, the series “Eboro” will be exhibited in New York and in Paris in 2026, and finally in Abidjan in 2027.

See also