Simon Chaput has had a passion for photography since his early childhood. He taught himself how to shoot and set up his own darkroom to print his gelatin silver prints at home. After owning an art gallery for seven years, Chaput left France in 1983 to live in New York. After this move, he started to focus more on his personal art photography.
Read MoreChaput's body of work over the years varies from social and subject documentary to color panoramic and fine art black and white photography. In 1996, he started his first long-term personal series entitled 'New York'; a suite of modernist views of Manhattan's architecture. This series marks the beginning of Chaput's distinct style of abstracting images by playing with negative space and paying special attention to geometrical compositions that force the viewer to look at these recognisable buildings in a new way. 'New York' can also be considered as documentary work, due to the city changing over the years. Chaput's striking images of the World Trade Center have become iconic and revered, as much as the buildings themselves before they were destroyed.