Juliette Francine is a photographer from Nice. Her work is intuitive, through photography she connects the intimacy of human body, yoga and contortion.
Repose: How would you describe what you do?
Juliette: I take photos. I try to recreate the images I have in my head. I’ve been photographing for a long time. I remember when I was a child, a friend of my parents took out a camera on the beach, I wanted to try it. I ended up buying one, and I never stopped.
Today, I mostly photograph people: bodies, postures, sometimes empty spaces, but the human element is always central. In middle and high school, I photographed my friends a lot, and myself too. I continued with my close circle, then with people who came into my life. I think that’s what you feel in my images, I often know the people I photograph, there’s a natural closeness.
Repose: What makes your work different?
Juliette: I think my background plays a role: I went to art school, then I studied circus, then a bit of dance. The body has always been a question for me : adolescence, insecurities, then the need for control, then the discipline of circus. All that has shaped my eye.
I’ve stopped intellectualising what I do. My work is very intuitive, not intellectual. I still wonder whether I really want to make it my profession, or whether it’s better to keep photography for myself.
Repose: What is your approach during photoshoots? How do you help people feel comfortable?
Juliette: It’s something I work on. Since I mostly photograph people close to me, they’re used to it, so it’s easy. With new people, I give very little direction. I ask them to find a comfortable posture, to move intuitively. The first few minutes are always more rigid, and then something relaxes, and I find again what I had seen in them before taking the photo.
Repose: What inspires you?
Juliette: The people around me. I need to know people to want to photograph them. And also this place, the South of France. I was born here. The light, the colors, even if it’s not literal in my work, they nourish me. I mostly photograph urban environments, but the calm and ease I look for probably come from here.
Repose: What would you say to the person you were when you started this project?
Juliette: I would tell myself to stop overthinking. When I was younger, I did things intuitively, and that’s often what works best. The more you know, the more you compare yourself, the more you doubt. I’d like to regain that early spontaneity.







Repose Archive is a creative direction journal documenting processes and projects across art, design, architecture, and hospitality. As designers, we interview creative minds and explore purposeful creation.

