Olivier Laban-Mattei has been a photojournalist since 1999. After ten years spent at Agence France-Presse covering national and international news (wars in Iraq, Georgia, Gaza, insurrection in Iran, earthquakes in Java and Haiti, cyclone in Burma... ), he has been involved since 2010 in long-term projects, devoting most of his current reflection to the question of the destructuring of societies, whether due to war, climate change or the greed of foreign investors for the riches of their land. New forms of colonialism are also at the heart of his concerns. Since 2013, he has been a member of the MYOP agency. Between 2013 and 2016, he works with the UNHCR on war trauma among refugee populations (Jordan, Central African Republic, Cameroon, Chad) and Solidarités International (South Sudan) while he continues since 2010 his regular collaborations with the French and foreign press (Arab Spring, wars in Libya and Yemen...). Between 2016 and 2019 he directed a documentary, Breathless, on the psychological trauma of a rape victim (France 3 national). In the continuity of his investigation in Mongolia on the harmful effects of the mining boom (2012 to 2014), he leads since 2020, with his son, Lisandru Laban-Giuliani, a project in Greenland on the contemporary Inuit society, mixing photographs and anticipation story. In 2021, he documents, for the DG ECHO (European Commission), the consequences of the crisis linked to the Covid-19 epidemic in the Rohingya refugee population in Bangladesh. His work, internationally recognized, has been awarded many times, including three World Press Photo, two Paris-Match awards, two POY, two Days Japan. He is also regularly exhibited and screened, in particular at the international festival of photojournalism Visa pour l'Image. In 2021, he won a grant from the Bibliothèque Nationale de France to work on the new peasantry in France. For years, Olivier Laban-Mattei has been passing on his knowledge of the profession during training courses in photojournalism and visual storytelling, while raising students' awareness of the meaning of images and their use. He published a book in 2013, Mongols (Les Belles Lettres).
Awards :
- 2006, 1st prize / Paris-Match award
- 2007, Bendrihem's 1st prize for the best European political photo
- 2009, World Press Photo, 3rd prize story in General News category
- 2009, Special award from the Jury of the international festival of photojournalism of Gijon
- 2010, Pictures of the year international (POYi), 2nd Prize
- 2010, Pictures of the year international (POYi), Award of excellence
- 2010, Special award from the Jury of Days Japan
- 2010, World Press Photo, 2nd Prize story in Spot News category
- 2010, Fotoweek DC, 3rd Prize - Series-Photojournalism/Social Documentary
- 2010, Bayeux-Calvados award for war correspondents, 2nd prize
- 2010, 1st prize / Paris-Match award
- 2011, World Press Photo, 1st prize story in General News category
- 2011, Best of Photojournalism 2011 (BOP-NPPA), 1st prize in "Natural Disaster" category
- 2017, Grant (1st prize) from La Scam for his video documentary, "Apnée" (with Baptiste de Cazenove)
- 2018, Public Prize of Days Japan (war in Yemen)
- 2021, Grant from the French National Library and the French Ministry of Culture