22/12/2025
Ne M’oublie Pas (Don’t Forget Me) is an exhibition that insists on memory as resistance. Opening at Union de la Jeunesse Internationale in Barbès during Paris Photo, this new edition revisits the extraordinary Studio Rex archives: tens of thousands of ID photographs and portraits taken in Marseille’s Belsunce district from the 1960s to the 1990s, at a crossroads of migration between ports, train stations, and uncertain futures.
Originally founded in 1933 by Assadour Keussayan, Studio Rex became a vital stop for North and West African migrants arriving in France – men clutching suitcases, women staring directly into the lens, lovers writing tender messages on the backs of photographs destined for families across seas. In Paris, curator Jean-Marie Donat presents these images against hot-pink walls, assembling passport-sized photos into a vast mural of passage and presence. Elsewhere, enlarged black-and-white portraits glow from lightboxes, while a film slowly morphs faces into one another, revealing how bureaucracy can blur lives and how looking closely restores them.
Rather than flattening stories, Ne M’oublie Pas rehumanises them. At a moment when migrants, particularly those of North African origin, are once again subjected to dehumanising rhetoric, this exhibition quietly but powerfully celebrates migration as lived experience. Shown inside the former TATI building – itself a landmark of working-class and immigrant Paris – the exhibition feels rooted.
Read the conversation at the link below.
Images of North African and African migrants to France from Ne M'oublie Pas resist forgetting in a new edition of the show – BJP speaks to curator Jean-Marie Donat