Photographer Florent Tribalat-Moreel is the Edge of Humanity Magazine contributor of this documentary photography. From the project ‘In the name of the Father’. To see Florent’s body of work, click on any photograph.



In the Name of the Father explores an Ecuadorian tradition: the transmission of the father’s first name from generation to generation. Across Ecuador and within all social strata, I photographed 46 families in their living rooms—each time featuring the grandfather, the father, and the grandson. The result is a visual narrative in which black and white emphasizes the repetition and uniformity of this lineage.
These portraits unveil a patriarchal legacy, where women remain on the margins, invisible. Through staging, families become co-authors of their image, affirming their internal dynamics. This series questions the weight of patriarchy and family structures through the lens of an intimate yet universal tradition.
The idea for In the Name of the Father was born from a memorable encounter in Ecuador. At a friend’s house, I discovered three generations of men sharing the same first name. This tradition, mundane to them, deeply intrigued me. Behind this simple act of transmission lies a complex mechanism of lineage, power, and symbolism. This realization fueled an obsession: to understand and document this phenomenon through a photographic series that explores patriarchal family structures and their silent impact on social dynamics.



By photographing these families in their living rooms—a paradoxical space that is both private and public—I uncovered revealing “micro-worlds.” Every detail, from the painting on the wall to the displayed trophies, carries symbolic weight. The men are central figures, ensuring family continuity, while women are omnipresent through their absence. This contrast underscores the central question: what does this legacy reveal about our humanity and its power dynamics?
Each portrait is the result of collaboration. I gave families complete freedom—which is also a responsibility—in their staging: choices of posture, placement, clothing, and expressions. This participatory approach transforms these photographs into mirrors of their family dynamics and aspirations, while questioning what they want —or are able—to show.
Beyond Ecuador’s borders, this series resonates universally. It questions the weight of patriarchy in our societies, gendered expectations, and the complex ties between tradition and modernity. With In the Name of the Father, I aim to spark reflection on these invisible legacies that continue to shape our identities and relationships.
Through these portraits, I discovered far more than an Ecuadorian tradition: a reflection of the fundamental structures of human societies, where power, gender, and identity intersect and assert themselves—often at the expense of those who remain unseen.



Florent Tribalat Moreel is a French photographer born in 1983 whose work questions power, gender, identity and the photographic process itself. He studied photography in Ecuador, where he lived for ten years and worked on the series “ In the name of the Father - the roots of Patriarchy ”. He often uses collage as a creative concept and process. He is currently working on a photographic series entitled “ The masculine takes precedence over the feminine ”, which will attempt to photographically question our excluding language. Florent Tribalat Moreel currently lives in Gap, in the French Alps.
All images and text © Florent Tribalat
See also:
By Florent Tribalat
Edge of Humanity Magazine is an independent nondiscriminatory platform that has no religious, political, financial, or social affiliations.
We are committed to publishing the human condition, the raw diverse global entanglement, with total impartiality.
COMMISSION FREE
CONTRACT FREE
Online platform for artists to sell their creations
Follow Edge of Humanity Magazine
Email Subscriptions
WordPress Bloggers
Follow Edge of Humanity Magazine on WordPress.com
Not on WordPress?
Don’t Forget to add
to your reader or bookmarks
Thank you!
![]()








