Death French-speaking Swiss photographer Monique Jacot dies at almost 90

SDA

6.8.2024 - 11:23

Monique Jacot from French-speaking Switzerland was one of Switzerland's most influential photographers, both in the field of photojournalism and in fine art. Now she has died shortly before her 90th birthday. (archive picture)
Monique Jacot from French-speaking Switzerland was one of Switzerland's most influential photographers, both in the field of photojournalism and in fine art. Now she has died shortly before her 90th birthday. (archive picture)
Keystone

The French-speaking Swiss photographer Monique Jacot has died shortly before her 90th birthday. Her family announced the news on Thursday. In 2020, the Federal Office of Culture honored her with the Swiss Grand Prix Design. Jacot is currently being exhibited in Venice.

Monique Jacot was born in Neuchâtel in August 1934. After attending arts and crafts school in Vevey, she made a name for herself in photojournalism between 1950 and 1980. Jacot worked for both the Swiss and foreign press, including "Schweizer Illustrierte", "l'Illustré", "Vogue", "Du", "Elle", "Geo" and the "Times".

Her humanistic images testify to her openness and sensitivity. With several series about factory workers, rural women or feminist demonstrations, including the women's strike of 1991, she bears witness to the living conditions of women.

As a great traveler, Monique Jacot also tells of the world. In the 1950s, she roamed California and Nevada, later Egypt, as well as several countries in Asia and Africa. The theme of landscapes also led her from the big wide world back to Switzerland - to the banks of the Doubs.

New experiences

In 1970, Jacot discovered Polaroid technology for her work. The instant camera offered her a creative freedom that she increasingly preferred to working for the press. She developed a personal visual vocabulary for her photography. She trained as a draughtswoman and also worked with engraving.

In contrast to her politically engaged reportages, her poetic images, which border on abstraction, tend towards contemplation, imagination and dreams. In 2020, she exhibited her heliograms at the Musée Jenisch in Vevey, which are the result of experiments between photogram and heliogravure.

Prestigious awards

In addition to the prestigious Grand Prix Design in the photography category, she has won several awards, including the Grand Prix 2005 from the Fondation vaudoise pour la promotion et la création artistiques, endowed with CHF 100,000. "This prize will help me to realize many projects," she said at the time.

In 2022, the Museum Photo Elysée at Plateforme 10 in Lausanne dedicated an exhibition to her, which runs until September under the title "Monique Jacot. La figure et ses doubles" at the Palazzetto Bru Zane in Venice until September.