"I love juxtaposing real and fake," says portrait photographer Sébastien Salamand, known as 'Le Turk'. "For this shoot, I brought nature inside the studio and placed it amongst my artificial set." Taken on a Canon EOS 5DS with a Canon EF 24-70mm f/2.8L II USM lens at 35mm, 1/80 sec, f/5.6 and ISO 200. © Sébastien Salamand dit Le Turk
If you're unfamiliar with the work of Sébastien Salamand, or 'Le Turk' as he is more commonly known, it's unlikely that you've seen anything quite like it before. His playful compositions are filled with both joy and despair, combining the risqué decadence of the Parisian cabaret scene with a darkly comic commentary on society.
Le Turk insists that his work "doesn't carry any hidden messages", rather it's simply "a chronicle of the strange world we live in". Any commentary that can be deduced from analysing his photographs and films is entirely up to his audience's interpretation. "I draw as much inspiration from artists such as Eugène Delacroix as I do from the silly films and mad pop culture of the 1980s," he says.