Hubbry Logo
Michel ComteMichel ComteMain
Open search
Michel Comte
Community hub
Michel Comte
logo
8 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Michel Comte
Michel Comte
from Wikipedia

Michel Alfred Comte (born 19 February 1954) is a Swiss artist, filmmaker, fashion and portrait photographer. His most recent art project 'Light', focuses on the impact of environmental decline through his large-scale installations, paintings, sculptures and multimedia artworks.

Key Information

Comte started his career as an art restorer, specializing in contemporary artworks such as Andy Warhol and Yves Klein. In 1979, he was discovered by Karl Lagerfeld, who gave him his first international assignment for Chloé and later Chanel. He became well known for his work with Vogue Italia, l'Uomo Vogue, Vanity Fair and Interview over the years, and has worked with brands such as Dolce & Gabbana, Gianfranco Ferre, BMW and Ferrari amongst others. He directed and produced his first feature film in 3D, The Girl from Nagasaki - a retelling of the classic opera Madama Butterfly, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2014.

Away from the high-gloss magazines and his campaigns for luxury brands, Comte kept himself grounded by taking on photo assignments for the International Red Cross (ICRC) in war-ravaged regions like Bosnia, Angola, Rwanda and Somalia. His work with the ICRC contributed to fundraising efforts to build an orthopaedic hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan and helped raise awareness and money for victims of conflict.

A passionate mountain climber and aviator, Comte began investigating climate change as a student and has had the unprecedented opportunity to observe and portray glacial landscapes all over the world. Two decades ago, Comte decided to wind down most of his activities as a commercial photographer to focus on Light, his most recent art project. Light is the study of natural landscapes and explores the impact of environmental changes via sculpture, paintings, installations and photography.

Light has been exhibited at the Triennale di Milano (2017), MAXXI in Rome (2017), Urs Meile Galleries (Beijing 2018 and Lucerne 2020) and Dirimart (Turkey) (2019).

Early life and career

[edit]

Comte was born 19 February 1954, in Zürich, Switzerland, the only child of Alfred Heinrich Comte (1926–2022) and Sylvia Maria Comte (née Boetschi; 1928–2015).[1] His paternal grandfather was Swiss aviation pioneer Alfred Comte who co-founded Swissair.[2][3] His father was a field sales representative and later board member of his photo studio Michel Comte SA.[4] Beginning with his grandfather, the family frequented Kronenhalle restaurant in Zürich, on a regular basis.[5]

He studied in England and in France, then started his career in contemporary art restoration, specializing in the works of Andy Warhol and Yves Klein. He was interested in photography and when moving to Paris in 1979, he was discovered by Karl Lagerfeld, who gave him first international assignment for the fashion house of Chloe. Comte then started working for such publications as Vogue US, Vogue Italia, Per Lui, Vanity Fair, and fashion houses such as Emanuel Ungaro, Chanel, Giorgio Armani and so on.

Career

[edit]

Comte produced many portraits including Jeremy Irons, Louise Bourgeois, Mike Tyson, Akira Kurosawa, Sharon Stone, Carla Bruni, Naomi Campbell, Helena Christensen, Miles Davis, Vanessa Paradis. Many of his images are shot for his long-time friend and influencer Franca Sozzani, an editor-in-chief of Vogue Italia. He continues to shoot for Vogue Italia. His advertising projects include Dolce & Gabbana, Nike, Lancôme, Ferrari, Jaguar, Mercedes-Benz, BMW, Hennessy, Davidoff, Gianfranco Ferre, Hermes, Trussardi, Pomellato, Celine, Givenchy, Zeiss and so on. He was awarded as Photographer of the year 2000 by PHOTO magazine.[citation needed]

Comte also followed the career of F1 driver Michael Schumacher.

Photo journalism

[edit]

Comte is involved in and known for his photo-reportage and documentary work. In collaboration with Pomellato and International Committee of the Red Cross, he contributed to the construction of the orthopaedic centre in Kabul. He traveled in conflict areas such as Bosnia, Kosovo, South Sudan, Iraq, Afghanistan and many others.

Film

[edit]

Comte directed and produced his first feature film in 3D, The Girl from Nagasaki, retelling of the classic opera, Madame Butterfly, in which Puccini's tragic heroine, emerging from the ashes of the atomic bomb, begins her fateful story of obsession for an American pilot.

Personal life

[edit]

After living in Milan and Paris, Comte relocated to New York City in 1981. In 1986, he married Dominique Kamber, a photo model.[6] They divorced in 1997.[7] They had two sons;

  • Diederik Comte (born 1987), a photographer
  • Brandon Oliver Comte (1993–2024)

In September 2007, Comte met Japanese-born model, stylist, costume designer and filmmaker Ayako Yoshida (born 1983), whom he married in April 2008.[8] They have been living in Bel Air, Los Angeles in California for over ten years before relocating back Switzerland.[9] They divorced in 2025.

Comte currently resides in Küsnacht on Lake Zürich.[10]

Books

[edit]
  • Michel Comte. Object Carpet, Achermann, 1996
  • Michel Comte: Kontraste/Contrasts, Stern Portfolio Library of Photography, 1998
  • Twenty Years 1979-1999: Faces by Michel Comte - Schirmer/Mosel, 1999
  • Aiko T. - Steidl, 2000
  • People and Places with No Name - Steidl, 2000
  • Charlie Chaplin: A Photo Diary - Steidl, 2002
  • Michael Schumacher: Driving Force - Ebury, 2003
  • Michael by Michel (Michael Schumacher by Michel Comte) - Steidl, 2003
  • The Face of Pace, Scuderia Ferrari - 2006
  • Michel Comte on Women - I-Management, 2006
  • Michel Comte: The Classics - I-Management, 2007
  • Badenfahrt - Ed. Zimmermann, 2007
  • Tibet, Zimmermann, 2007
  • 791: Michel Comte on Michael Schumacher - Ed. Zimmermann, 2007
  • Speed! Michel Comte on Michael Schumacher, La Scuderia Ferrari, 2007
  • Michel Comte - 360° - NRW Forum Kultur und Wirtschaft/Museum fur Gestaltung, 2008
  • Michel Comte - Thirty Years and Five Minutes - teNeues, 2009
  • Michel Comte, Crescendo Fotografico, curated by Walter Keller, Carlo Cambi Editore, 2010
  • Michel Comte: Not Only Women, Feminine Icons of Our Times - Silvana Editoriale, 2011
  • The Little Girl from Nagasaki, A Film by Michel Comte, 2014
  • Michel Comte and MILK. A collaboration - Damiani, 2015
  • Light, Michel Comte, Steidl, 2017
  • Aviator, Michael Comte, Steidl, 2020

Exhibitions

[edit]
  • Peggy Guggenheim, Venice 1995
  • Wanderausstellung, Germany 2001
  • Centro Internazionale di Fotografia, Verona 2002
  • He Xiang Ning Art Museum, Shenzhen, 2005
  • The Face of Pace. La Scuderia Ferrari. Michel Comte, Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich 2006[11]
  • Michel Comte on Women, Hotel Suvretta House, St Moritz, 2006
  • Pobeda Gallery, Moscow 2007
  • Espace de l'art contemporain, Mouans-Sartoux 2008
  • NRW-Forum, Düsseldorf 2009
  • Young Gallery, Brussels 2009
  • Museum fur Gestaltung, Zürich 2009
  • Not Only Women, Lu.C.C.A. Center of Contemporary Arts, Lucca 2010
  • Crescendo Fotografico, Triennale di Milano, Milan 2011[12]
  • Grand Palais, Paris, 2011
  • Contemporary Istanbul, Istanbul, 2012
  • Au Premier, HB, Zürich, 2013
  • Kunst Haus, Vienna, 2013
  • Galerie XXI, Geneva, 2015
  • MILK, New York, 2015
  • Michel Comte Neoclassic, Palazzo del Governatore, Parma, 2016[13]
  • Michel Comte. Light, MAXXI, Rome, 2017[14]
  • Michel Comte Black Light, White Light, Triennale di Milano, Milan, 2017[15]
  • Light III, Galerie Urs Meile, Beijing 2018[16]
  • Erosion, Galerie Urs Meile, Lucerne 2020

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Michel Comte is a Swiss photographer, filmmaker, and contemporary visual artist known for his influential contributions to fashion photography, humanitarian photojournalism, and large-scale multimedia projects focused on environmental decline. Born in Zurich on February 19, 1954, he initially trained in art restoration, specializing in contemporary works by artists such as Andy Warhol and Yves Klein, before entering photography in the late 1970s after Karl Lagerfeld provided his first major commercial assignment for Chloé. Comte rose to prominence in the 1980s and 1990s through high-profile fashion campaigns and editorials for brands including Chanel, Dolce & Gabbana, Versace, Gianfranco Ferré, and Hermès, as well as publications such as Vogue Italia, Vanity Fair, and Interview. He produced iconic celebrity portraits of figures including Miles Davis, Whitney Houston, Tina Turner, and Catherine Deneuve, while also documenting supermodels such as Naomi Campbell, Cindy Crawford, and Gisele Bündchen. Concurrently, he pursued humanitarian work, collaborating with the International Committee of the Red Cross to photograph conflict zones in regions including Bosnia, Afghanistan, Iraq, Sudan, and Somalia, with proceeds and awareness from his images supporting initiatives like an orthopaedic hospital in Kabul; this work culminated in his book People and Places with No Name, published by Steidl. In more recent years, Comte has expanded into filmmaking and environmental art. He directed and co-wrote the 3D feature film The Girl from Nagasaki, a modern retelling of Madame Butterfly, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2014. Influenced by his grandfather's early aerial documentation of Alpine glaciers and his own lifelong observations of climate change, he has focused on the ongoing project Light, which examines glacier melt, erosion, and ecological impact through monumental sculptures, installations, paintings, photography, and video art using materials such as glass, ice, stone, and pigments. Exhibited at venues including La Triennale di Milano, MAXXI in Rome, and Galerie Urs Meile, the series reflects his shift toward activism and interdisciplinary art addressing global environmental crises.

Early life

Family background

Michel Comte was born on 19 February 1954 in Zürich, Switzerland. He is the grandson of Alfred Comte, a Swiss aviation pioneer known for his early Alpine flights and amateur aerial photography of the region's glaciers and mountains in the early 20th century. His grandfather, who flew over the Alps among the first aviators to do so, captured images in 1914 showing vast, intact glacier coverage during summer, which he later shared with his grandson. These family-connected historical photographs fostered Comte's early interest in mountains and aviation stemming from his family's aviation legacy. The images of majestic Alpine glaciers served as a key reference point for his later environmental photography, inspiring long-term projects documenting glacial retreat due to climate change. Comte has directly compared his grandfather's century-old views—where summer landscapes appeared almost entirely white—with his own aerial and ground photographs taken over recent decades, revealing near-total loss of ice in many of the same locations.

Education and art restoration career

Michel Comte studied in France and England. He began his professional career as an art restorer specializing in the conservation of contemporary artworks. His restoration practice focused particularly on pieces by Andy Warhol and Yves Klein. This work in art conservation continued until 1979, when he moved to Paris.

Early career in film production

Props and art department work

Michel Comte began his career in the Canadian film industry during the early 1980s, taking on entry-level roles in the props and art department for several productions. His earliest credit came as assistant propsman on David Cronenberg's science fiction horror film Scanners (1981). That same year, he served as props buyer for the comedy Gas (1981). He continued in similar capacities over the following years, working as assistant props person on the comedy The Funny Farm (1983). In 1986, he contributed as assistant props to the science fiction action film The Vindicator. Toward the end of the decade, Comte handled props duties on the adventure film State Park (1988) and on one episode of the television series Formula 1 (1988). These early positions in props and art department provided Comte with foundational experience in film production before he moved into camera and electrical department roles in subsequent years.

Camera and electrical department roles

Michel Comte contributed to numerous film and television productions in camera department roles throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, primarily in Canadian cinema and television. His early camera work included second assistant camera on Alisée (1991) and assistant camera on Shadow of the Wolf (1992), where he served on the action unit. He subsequently worked as focus puller and assistant camera on several features, including Relative Fear (1994), Screamers (1995) as assistant camera for the second unit, Dead Innocent (1997), and Escape from Wildcat Canyon (1998). In the early 2000s, Comte advanced to first assistant camera positions on Pressure Point (2001), Nowhere in Sight (2001), and the television series Fortier (2001, 6 episodes). Later in his technical career, he served as first assistant camera for the second unit on Death Race (2008). He also received credit as photographer on the television special Diana Ross Live! The Lady Sings... Jazz & Blues (1992). This period of hands-on camera and electrical department work overlapped with the emergence of his parallel career in fashion and advertising photography during the 1980s and 1990s.

Photography career

Fashion and advertising photography

Michel Comte's breakthrough in fashion and advertising photography came in 1979 when Karl Lagerfeld discovered him and entrusted him with his first commercial assignment for Chloé, followed by subsequent work for Chanel. This early opportunity launched a prolific career marked by high-profile editorial and commercial projects. He established long-term collaborations with influential magazines including Vogue Italia, L’Uomo Vogue, Vanity Fair, and Interview, contributing regularly to their pages over decades. His advertising portfolio encompassed campaigns for major luxury and consumer brands such as Dolce & Gabbana, Giorgio Armani, Hermès, Lancôme, Nike, BMW, Ferrari, Mercedes-Benz, and Jaguar. In recognition of his contributions to the field, Comte was awarded Photographer of the Year by PHOTO magazine in 2000. He also maintained a sustained documentation of Formula 1 driver Michael Schumacher's career, capturing intimate and dynamic images over many years. During the 1990s, alongside his ongoing fashion and advertising commitments, Comte pursued parallel humanitarian photography efforts.

Portrait and celebrity photography

Michel Comte has developed a renowned body of portrait and celebrity photography spanning several decades, characterized by intimate, humanizing depictions that reveal vulnerability and authenticity in his subjects. He has emphasized that his intent was never to glorify fame, stating "I didn't become a photographer to feature celebrities. That was never my intention. Fame was never interesting to me; people were," which informed his approach of creating trusting environments to capture raw, unmasked moments. His portraits include notable figures from diverse fields, such as actors Jeremy Irons and Sharon Stone, artist Louise Bourgeois, filmmaker Akira Kurosawa, boxer Mike Tyson, musician Miles Davis, and personalities Carla Bruni, Naomi Campbell, Helena Christensen, and Vanessa Paradis. These works occasionally overlap with his fashion clients, incorporating models and entertainers into personal sittings that emphasize character over glamour. Comte has compiled many of these portraits in dedicated publications. In 1999, he released Twenty Years 1979-1999: Faces by Michel Comte, a comprehensive collection presenting his incomparable portraits from that era in a sumptuous volume featuring numerous color and duotone illustrations. He followed this with Michel Comte on Women in 2006, focused on his images of female subjects. In 2011, Not Only Women, Feminine Icons of Our Times featured 60 color plates of portraits from cinema, fashion, theater, music, and art, exploring how his work expands categories of portraiture and glamour by elevating subjects such as Naomi Campbell, Carla Bruni, Sharon Stone, and Louise Bourgeois into contemporary icons.

Humanitarian and photojournalism work

Collaboration with the International Committee of the Red Cross

Michel Comte began a long-standing collaboration with the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in the 1990s, producing photographic assignments that documented conditions in various conflict-affected regions. These efforts supported the organization's humanitarian mission by raising awareness and generating funds for those impacted by war. His work specifically contributed to fundraising initiatives for the construction of an orthopaedic hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan, providing critical support for amputees and other victims requiring prosthetic care. Much of the photographic material from these assignments was compiled in the book People and Places with No Name, published by Steidl in 2000.

Documented conflict zones

During the 1990s, Michel Comte undertook repeated photographic assignments in numerous conflict zones, documenting the human impact of war. His travels focused on regions across Africa, the Middle East, and the Balkans, including Bosnia, Angola, Rwanda, Somalia, Kosovo, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Kenya, and Sudan. He also visited Afghanistan in connection with his humanitarian work. During the Gulf War, Comte made two trips to Iraq and conducted work in Jordan, Israel, Palestine, Egypt, and Syria. These assignments captured scenes of suffering and resilience in active war zones. His experiences in these areas were later compiled in the book People and Places with No Name, published by Steidl, which records much of what he witnessed during this period.

Film directing and production

The Girl from Nagasaki

The Girl from Nagasaki is the 2013 feature directorial debut of Michel Comte, who also co-wrote the screenplay with Anne-Marie Mackay and served as producer on the project. This 3D romantic musical drama reworks Giacomo Puccini's opera Madama Butterfly, relocating the story to post-atomic bomb Nagasaki, where a young survivor becomes involved in a tragic romance. The film blends elements of opera, ballet, and modern visual experimentation, with Comte drawing on his background in photography and art installations to create an avant-garde cinematic experience. The production featured an international cast including Mariko Wordell in the lead role, Edoardo Ponti, Christopher Lee, Michael Wincott, and Michael Nyqvist in supporting parts. Comte co-produced the film alongside Ayako Yoshida—his wife—and Amy Filbeck. The film premiered as the closing night selection of the Naples International Film Festival on November 9, 2013. It later screened in the New Frontier section of the Sundance Film Festival on January 18, 2014.

Other film production credits

Michel Comte has participated in several film projects in supporting capacities beyond his primary directing efforts. He served as a producer on the documentary Troublemakers: The Story of Land Art (2015), directed by James Crump, which examines the emergence and impact of the land art movement in the United States during the 1960s and 1970s. In addition to producing, Comte took on a brief acting role as the Photographer in the short film Any Day Now (2011). He also received a thanks credit for contributing archival footage or photographs to the documentary The Kid Stays in the Picture (2002).

Fine art and environmental projects

Development of the Light project

Michel Comte began focusing on the Light project in 2009, after officially withdrawing from fashion photography to devote himself to fine art creation. The project developed as a multidisciplinary study of natural landscapes and their vulnerability, examining the effects of climate change through elements such as glacier meltdowns, rising ocean levels, acid rains, and erosions. It integrates photography, sculpture, paintings, installations, and 3D video art to present these environmental changes from a monumental perspective that emphasizes the play of light. The development of Light draws heavily on Comte's more than three decades of repeatedly revisiting and documenting the same glacial locations worldwide, often from open helicopters or by climbing, to capture their progressive disappearance. This long-term observation is influenced by his grandfather Alfred Comte's early images of majestic Alpine glaciers that nearly covered entire mountain ranges, which starkly contrast with the current state of glacial retreat. An additional formative influence is an essay Comte wrote in 1975, before university, titled “Water Is the Oil of the Future,” which he presented at the Club of Rome and which anticipated future water scarcity issues tied to environmental decline. The artworks in Light employ materials including glass (such as Murano), ice, stone, granite, pigment, salt, dust, wood, ceramics, and toxic black carbon fallout from jet fuel to create immersive and monumental expressions of these themes.

Major exhibitions and installations

Michel Comte's fine art photography and installations have been showcased in numerous solo exhibitions at leading museums and galleries internationally. His earlier presentations include Afghanistan at the Peggy Guggenheim Collection in Venice in 1995 and The Face of Pace at the Pinakothek der Moderne in Munich in 2006. A comprehensive exhibition of his work took place at the Museum für Gestaltung Zürich in 2009. In 2016, Comte exhibited Neoclassic at Palazzo del Governatore in Parma, Italy, and at Galleria d’Arte Moderna in Milan. His exhibitions in 2017 prominently featured the Light project, with Michel Comte. Light at MAXXI in Rome from November 15 to December 10, 2017, and Black Light, White Light at La Triennale di Milano from November 28, 2017, to January 6, 2018. The Light series continued with Light III at Galerie Urs Meile in Beijing in 2018 and Light IV at Dirimart in Istanbul in 2019. More recent installations include Erosion I at Galerie Urs Meile in Lucerne, Switzerland, in 2020, and Erosion II at the artist's studio in Uetikon am See, Switzerland, from December 2020 to January 2021.

Personal life

Marriages and family

Michel Comte was first married to the model Dominique Kamber. They had two sons: Diederik Comte (born 1987), who has worked as a photographer, and Brandon Oliver Comte (1994–2024). Brandon suffered from an incurable illness for 20 years that eventually made swallowing impossible and required artificial feeding, leading to extended time in intensive care at the University Hospital Zurich. He died on 18 October 2024 at age 30; Comte described him as a strong, courageous, compassionate, and highly intelligent individual with an artistic soul who left behind drawings, paintings, and writings. Comte is preparing a book featuring Brandon’s diary for publication by Steidl Verlag. In 2008, Comte married Ayako Yoshida, a Japanese-born model, stylist, and filmmaker. They have collaborated on creative projects, including the film The Girl from Nagasaki.

Residences, interests, and activism

Michel Comte has lived in Milan, Paris, and New York City starting from 1981, later residing in Bel Air, Los Angeles, for over ten years before returning to Switzerland. He currently resides in Küsnacht on Lake Zürich, Switzerland. A lifelong passionate mountain climber and aviator, Comte has documented glacial landscapes worldwide for over three decades, often capturing images from open helicopters, while gliding through clouds, or during climbs. His interest in aviation connects to his family background, as his grandfather, Swiss pioneer aviator Alfred Comte, photographed majestic Alpine glaciers in 1914. Observing the rapid decline since then, he has revisited the same locations repeatedly to portray the disappearance of glaciers and global ice sheets. Comte's environmental activism centers on raising awareness of climate change through his long-term 'Light' project, which uses photography, sculpture, video installations, and projections to highlight the fragility of glacial landscapes and the broader impacts of environmental decline on oceans and ice masses. The project serves as a political statement and call to action, emphasizing humanity's power to slow global warming, transition to cleaner energy, and work with nature for a sustainable future. His glacier documentation and activism build on early concerns, including a 1975 essay presented at the Club of Rome warning of water scarcity amid climate challenges.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.