Max Pinckers is a Belgian photographer based in Brussels. He has self-published the books The Fourth Wall ; Will They Sing Like Raindrops or Leave Me Thirsty ; and Red Ink, which won the Leica Oskar Barnack Award. Pinckers has also won the Edward Steichen Award Laureate.
Life and work
Pinckers was born in 1988 in Brussels, Belgium. He gained a BA and a MFA in photography at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Ghent, Belgium. From 2015 to 2017 he was a nominee member of Magnum Photos before leaving the agency. Sean O'Hagan, writing in The Guardian, has described the format of Pinckers' second book, Will They Sing Like Raindrops or Leave Me Thirsty as "sitting between conceptual and documentary, while upending expectations of each" as it "mixes documentary photography with staged scenes reminiscent of Bollywood movies." O'Hagan summarised the book's subject matter as "central to this rich visual narrative is a series of photographs of a four-man activist organisation called the Love Commandos. Based in Delhi, they operate on a shoestring from their small, cluttered office, manning a telephone helpline and website to provide advice and support – including safe rooms and shelters across India – for runaway couples who have fallen in love across the boundaries of caste or religion. The commandos have even sent out teams to rescue young people at risk of violence."
Publications
Publications by Pinckers
The Fourth Wall. Self-published, 2012.. Edition of 1000 copies.
Will They Sing Like Raindrops or Leave Me Thirsty. Self-published, 2014.. With a text by Hans Theys, "Photographs as Poems". Edition of 1000 copies. Commissioned by Europalia International Arts Festival for the Indomania exhibition at Bozar - Centre of Fine Arts, Brussels, 2013.
Margins Of Excess. Self-published, 2018. Edition of 1500 copies.
Red Ink. Self-published, 2018. Edition of 850 copies.
Publications paired with others
Controversy. Brussels: Lyre Press, 2017. With Sam Weerdmeester.. With texts by Lars Kwakkenbos, J.M. Susperregui and Hans Durrer.
Lotus. By Pinckers and Quinten De Bruyn.
*Self-published, 2011. With text by Hans Theys, "Our Ladies of the Flowers". Edition of 40 copies.
*Brussels: Lyre Press, 2016.. Edition of 3000 copies. With text by Hans Theys, "Our Ladies of the Flowers".
Mamihlapinatapai. Self-published, 2012. By Pinckers and Michiel Burger. With a text by Laura van Grinsven, "Exchanging Gazes". Edition of 1200 copies. Produced on the occasion of the exhibition Mamihlapinatapai: A look shared by two people, each wishing that the other will initiate something that both desire but which neither one wants to start, Flemish Arts Centre De Brakke Grond, The Netherlands, October 2012.
Floating Worlds. Brussels: Lyre Press; Bolzano, Italy: Rorhof, 2016. With Daisuke Yokota.. With a text by Colin Pantall. A catalogue of an exhibition curated by Nicoló Degiorgis at Foto-Forum Gallery, Bolzano, Italy, May 2016. The book includes Yokota’s "Linger" and Pinckers’ "Two Kinds of Memory and Memory Itself."
Publications with contributions by Pinckers
The World Atlas of Street Photography. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2014.. Edited by Jackie Higgins. With a foreword by Max Kozloff.
Selected exhibitions with others or during festivals
The Struggle for Freedom in: ________,Lagos Photo Festival 2015, Lagos, Nigeria, October–November 2015. Pair exhibition with Michiel Burger.
2014: Runner-up, Aperture Portfolio Prize, for Will They Sing Like Raindrops or Leave Me Thirsty
2014: First prize, Photographic Museum of Humanity 2014 grant, Buenos Aires, Argentina. A prize of $2000 for Will They Sing Like Raindrops or Leave Me Thirsty.
2015: Shortlisted for the Anamorphosis Prize, USA, for Will They Sing Like Raindrops or Leave Me Thirsty