Skip to main content
Vilcek Foundation
  • About
    • About

      The Vilcek Foundation raises awareness of immigrant contributions in the United States and fosters appreciation of the arts and sciences.

    • Our Mission
    • Our Founders
    • Our Team
    • Our History
    • Archive
    • Press Center
    • Contact
  • Prizes
    • Prizes

      The Vilcek Foundation Prizes celebrate extraordinary achievements in the arts and sciences.

    • About the Prizes
    • Prize Recipients
    • Vilcek Prize

      Awards immigrants with a legacy of major accomplishments.

    • Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise

      Recognizes young immigrant professionals for outstanding achievements.

    • Vilcek Prize for Excellence

      Celebrating intellectual and cultural leaders in the United States.

    • Marica Vilcek Prize in Art History

      Honors art historians, curators, and fine arts professionals.

  • Art
  • Grants
    • Grants

      Grants awarded to 501(c)(3) cultural, educational, and philanthropic organizations in the United States.

    • Grants

      Learn more and apply for a grant.

    • Grants History

      Explore a list of past Vilcek Foundation grantees.

    • Open Grant Applications

      Apply now for Vilcek Foundation grants. Nonprofit organizations meeting eligibility requirements are invited to submit applications by April 30, 2026.

      APPLY FOR A GRANT
  • Events
  • News
Sign Up Search
Home > News > Two Brothers Create Bold Images Celebrating Beauty of Color

Two Brothers Create Bold Images Celebrating Beauty of Color

News | February 2, 2026
Tags
african diaspora fashion photography France Guadeloupe photographer photography St. Maarten
Download audio
Audio: Listen to this post
Share this page
Share this page on X Share this page on Facebook Share this page on LinkedIn
Jalan and Jibril Durimel holding their film camera equipment and giving directions to models at a park.

Jalan and Jibril Durimel create fictional scenes to tell the true stories of African culture through photography. Born in Paris to parents from Guadeloupe and raised in Miami and St. Maarten, the twin brothers’ exposure to a plethora of places and people instilled a strong foundation of curiosity and empathy that they carry into their artistic practice. 

“We have come to believe that fiction is a theme park for the imagination, a final play place that acknowledges that peace is amongst the people,” they say.

Breaking Boundaries, Pushing Opportunities

The Durimel brothers setting up their photography equipment along with their two models outside by the sunset.

The Durimel brothers’ first foray into photography followed a rigid documentarian path: They traveled to particular areas to photograph what they witnessed. But they soon found this process constrictive and lacking originality. 

Everything changed after the twins were introduced to Brief Encounters (2012), a documentary about renowned photographer Gregory Crewdson, who staged elaborate scenes for each picture. The Durimels note that watching this film pushed them to pivot their attention from documentary photography to fictitious image making. In particular, the photographers hope to create joyful images of the African diaspora that reference the Pictorialist movement of the 19th century. 

Jibril Durimel looking at a print of one of his photos from his picture collection. A model standing on rocks by the sea.

“Contrary to the rigorous political climate of Black imagery today, we began this venture with the primary intent of presenting an optical delight, similar to the Impressionist movement of the late 1800s,” they explain. “For us, beauty serves a simple purpose: to inspire and accompany individuals in their pursuit to lead dignified lives with the hope to make this world a better home.”

Capturing the Beauty of the Tropics  

In 2023, fashion designer Grace Wales Bonner commissioned the Durimels to direct a film for the campaign of her Adidas capsule collection in Portland, Jamaica. Together they gathered a cast to make a poetic film that shared the beauty of recreation among Rastafarian pre-teens growing up on the island.

Recently, the brothers were approached by T Magazine to photograph a cover story for the publication’s 2025 travel issue. Durimel and Durimel were able to choose any destination for the project, and elected to return to the island of their ancestry, Guadeloupe. 

Jalan Durimel looking at his subject and taking pictures with his film camera at a park.

“For years we’ve collected old postcard images of the Caribbean islands often dating back to colonial times,” they explain. “Due to the end of analog photography as the norm, contemporary images of the Caribbean felt clinical and lacking in sensuality. We went to Guadeloupe with a simple intention in mind: to make new images of our mother’s homeland that could rival those on the souvenir placemats and postcards we had seen over the years.”

Untamed Curiosities

The Durimels have had great success in the fashion industry, noting that it has provided them immense financial freedom and led to fruitful creative collaborations. However, they observed that fashion advertising had somewhat limited their autonomy by placing too much emphasis on the wardrobe. They began to envy the freedom of other artists who were seemingly free to chase after their “untamed curiosities.”

Close-up of Jalan Durimel's eyes as he makes a square with his hands to frame a picture.

Realizing this truth led the brothers to begin Quiet as the Country, a photography series eight years in the making that documents the quotidian life of a fictitious region, which sits at the confluence of Western, African, and Asian aesthetics. 

“Here we have been free to design costumes, cast, explore Senegal and the Ivory Coast, and create without commercial boundaries,” the Durimels say. “This invaluable experience has taught us about ourselves, collaboration, patience, and the courage it takes to develop an artistic identity.” 

They plan to complete this project in 2026 with the money awarded to them as part of the Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise in Fashion & Culture. The twins say that immigrating to the United States has afforded them the opportunities to pursue their ambitions. 

Jalan Durimel smiling with his arms crossed and sitting down on a table at his home.

“Though America has its share of faults, it is undoubtedly one of the fairest and most open-minded societies in history,” they state. “Our travels have been a clear reminder that we are very fortunate to live in a country that most people immigrate to and not from.”

Tags
african diaspora fashion photography France Guadeloupe photographer photography St. Maarten
Share this page
Share this page on X Share this page on Facebook Share this page on LinkedIn

Related News

February 2, 2026

Giving Flowers: Diego Bendezu’s Mission to Photograph the Unseen

An immigrant from Peru, Bendezu is committed to capturing the beauty of Latin American culture in the fashion industry.
Portrait of Diego Bendezu wearing a dark jacket, looking off to the side against a wall with a strong shadow cast behind him.
February 3, 2025

Vilcek Foundation Awards $250,000 in Prizes to Immigrant Curators

The Vilcek Foundation awards $250,000 in prizes to immigrant curators Oluremi C. Onabanjo, Donna Honarpisheh, Aimé Iglesias Lukin, and Bernardo Mosqueira with the 2025 Vilcek Foundation Prizes in Curatorial Work.
Four diagonal splices featuring portraits of Oluremi C. Onabanjo, Donna Honarpisheh, Aime Iglesias Lukin, and Bernardo Mosqueira, against a red background.
February 3, 2025

Oluremi C. Onabanjo: Expanding the Horizons of Photographic Histories

Learn more about Vilcek Prize winner, curator, and scholar Oluremi C. Onabanjo’s impactful work expanding the horizons of the history of photography.
Oluremi standing in the Sculpture Garden at the MoMA with green trees visible behind her.

You may also be interested in

Jalan and Jibril Durimel

The Durimels receive the 2026 Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise in Fashion & Culture in recognition of their ability to present fashion as part of a broader, evocative exploration of fictitious storytelling, color, and light.
A portrait of Jalan and Jibril Durimel.

Diego Bendezu

Diego Bendezu is awarded the 2026 Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise in Fashion & Culture for his powerful visual storytelling that centers Latin American voices and his work to reshape how the industry sees beauty and cultural authenticity.
A portrait of Diego Bendezu.

Oluremi C. Onabanjo

Oluremi C. Onabanjo receives the Vilcek Prize in Curatorial Work for her work to examine the power, position, and production of Blackness in relation to the unfinished global history of the photographic medium.
A portrait of Oluremi Onabanjo.

Join our mailing list

Sign Up
Vilcek Foundation
21 East 70th Street
New York, New York 10021

Phone: 212.472.2500

Email: info@vilcek.org

  • About
    • Our Mission
    • Our Founders
    • Our Team
    • Our History
    • Archive
    • Press Center
    • Contact
  • Prizes
    • Prize Recipients
    • Vilcek Prize
    • Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise
    • Vilcek Prize for Excellence
    • Marica Vilcek Prize in Art History
  • Art
  • Grants
    • Grants History
  • Events
  • News
  • Careers
Connect with us
  • Connect with the Vilcek Foundation on Facebook
  • Connect with the Vilcek Foundation on Instagram
  • Connect with the Vilcek Foundation on Bluesky
  • Connect with the Vilcek Foundation on X
  • Connect with the Vilcek Foundation on LinkedIn
  • Connect with the Vilcek Foundation on Youtube
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Accessibility Statement
© 2026   Vilcek Foundation