Manchot first came to prominence in the mid- to late nineties for an early series of portraits taken entirely of her mother who she photographed naked both in the studio and against a variety of city- and landscapes. When first exhibited the works received widespread attention and contributed to a growing debate around the representation of women, age and contested notions of body politics. Since 2000 Manchot's practice has increasingly incorporated film and video installation with the frame of reference expanding to include archive film, experimental film and cinematic history. Manchot's methodology is based around participatory processes, often involving groups or communities and creating expanded portraits of people, both their individual and social selfs. Manchot's work has been widely exhibited in galleries, museums and film festivals internationally. Notable solo exhibitions include
Celebration (Cyprus Street),
Whitechapel Gallery, London (2010);
Portland Institute for Contemporary Art, Oregon;
Moscow Girls und Andere Geschichten, Haus am Waldsee, Berlin (2006),
Melanie Manchot,
Cornerhouse, Manchester (2002) and
Stories from Russia,
The Photographers' Gallery, London (2005). In 2023, Manchot's first feature film, Stephen, was released, a 'docudrama' in which 'members of the Liverpool addiction and trauma recovery community partake in a Freudian re-enactment', in which 'the line between fact and fiction is thin to vanishing'. Manchot has also exhibited extensively in group shows around the world at institutes such as MOTinternational, London;
Centre for Contemporary Arts, Glasgow;
Moscow Museum of Modern Art;
Istanbul Biennal (2009) and the
New Forest Pavilion, 52nd International Art Exhibition –
Venice Biennale (2007). Manchot is a trustee of The Photographers' Gallery, London. She is also on the editorial board of numerous art journals. In 2020, Manchot was awarded an Honorary Fellowship of the
Royal Photographic Society, Bristol. == Monographs ==