
French photographer Jean-Francois Rauzier's
"Hyperphotos" will blow you away. Just what is a hyperphoto? Rauzier
coined the term himself. It is a layering of hundreds of
thousands of high-resolution images into one amazing, large-scale
seamless collage.

Rauzier has been using a camera professionally for
almost 40 years as an advertising photographer. Being in the
business taught him much about the technical aspects of photography.
However, he yearned to use his creative side and his love of art
history and literature. Rauzier has been a full-time artist since
2000 when he started producing his hyperphotos.
Each hyperphoto is composed of between 600 and 3,500
individual close-up images, taken one by one, using a telephoto lens
over a period of one to two hours. Once Rauzier is satisfied that he
has captured the scene, he "stitches" them together using Photoshop,
until the whole image becomes one. They are then printed in
large-format sizes such as 35 inches x 75 inches, 47 inches x 98
inches, and 70 inches x 118 inches.
The settings in Rauzier's photos are all recomposed,
whether they are landscapes, seascapes or interiors, offering
contrasting views of places both real and imagined. To help
re-create his extraordinarily detailed and super-natural
backgrounds, Rauzier has built a vast image library of buildings,
people, trees, skies, forests, and fields. This allows him the
freedom to invent compositions as if he was a painter, by
controlling the lighting and the placement of objects.
The hyperphotos are executed in
a format that can be printed up to 30 feet by 10 feet
without losing any of the detail or quality. Their sheer scale is
what draws the viewer in, even when they are printed in a more
"manageable" size. As Rauzier states himself, "When you are looking
at a Hyperphoto, at first you think you are looking at an
enlargement of a panoramic photograph. Not quite. Look more
closely...the viewer gets distanced from the real world and absorbed
into a universe of dizzying magnitude".

To give you an example of how detailed Rauzier's
works are, in his photograph above titled Citadelle 1, the
majority of images were taken from a ground floor apartment in a
large hotel in Paris. Rauzier has talked about walking through the
vast empty halls of the hotel, feeling faint as the walls seemed to
fall away and then move back again, multiplying in infinity. The
twilight hour seems to have obscured the inside from the outside and
brought on the appearances of well-known authors. A key to the
60 writers represented in the photograph is supplied with this work.
They include Lewis Carroll, Charles Dickens, Edgar Allen Poe, and
Jules Verne.

Jean-Francois Rauzier was born in 1952 in France and
graduated with a degree from the French Photographic School, Ecole
Nationale Louis Lumiere. He has had numerous shows in Europe and won
several awards for his work within the last few years. Rauzier will
be having his first solo New York show in May. It will definitely be
worth the trip!