Franck Bohbot was born in 1980 near Paris (France) and he lives and works in Brooklyn (New York) and Los Angeles (California). Franck Bohbot is a french photographer and filmmaker who explores the extraordinary of everyday life. His dreamlike style, combined with his use of color carefully constructed compositions, elevated ordinary subjects to the level of art, leading the viewer's eye in the same direction as the subjects are looking.

Franck Bohbot was born in 1980 near Paris (France) and he lives and works in Brooklyn (New York) and Los Angeles (California).
Franck Bohbot is a french photographer and filmmaker who explores the extraordinary of everyday life.
His dreamlike style, combined with his use of color carefully constructed compositions, elevated ordinary subjects to the level of art, leading the viewer’s eye in the same direction as the subjects are looking.
He focuses his artistic research on public spaces, urban landscapes and environmental portraits.
Rooted in his fascination with cinematographic iconography, his thematics study the relationship between the individual and architecture.
While manipulating color with great precision, he highlights the soft subtleties of this relationship by playing with both fluorescent and melancholic light and chromatics.
Each one of Bohbot’s works features these photographic intentions and, through their enigmatic atmosphere, documentary-style approach and timeless feel, we are transported to a dreamy, velvety, and nearly infinite visual paradise.
His unique style enabled him to work with prestigious magazines, institutions and designers such as the New York Times, The New York Magazine, National Geographic, The Louvre Museum, Sotheby’s, Paul Smith and Christian Dior.

National Geographic described Bohbot as ‘A master of interior and exterior spaces’.
WIRED Magazine wrote on Franck Bohbot’s ‘Chinatown’ series ‘The series draws directly from the visual vocabulary and tonal palette of cinema. Many of the pictures bring to mind the unmistakable look of Blade Runner. The heavy atmosphere in these photos seems loaded with a sense of drama, like a portal into some modern noir film’.
ArchDaily Architecture wrote ‘Bohbot embraces quasiperfect symmetry, creating a surreal quality and invoking a sense of curiosity with each image’.