Miss Naturism Instant

On the first day, I kept my camera in my bag. I wore a sundress and felt absurdly overdressed. Everyone else was bare as stones, and after a while, I stopped seeing their bodies as anything remarkable. They were just people: reading, playing pétanque, peeling oranges. A grandfather taught his granddaughter how to skip stones. Two women shared a bottle of rosé and laughed at something on their phone.

The contest took place on the third day. There was no stage, no swimsuit round, no evening gowns. The “competition” was a long, meandering walk through the forest, ending at a clearing by the river. Each participant was invited to speak for three minutes about what naturism meant to them.

It was the summer of mismatched expectations. I was twenty-three, a junior photo editor for a glossy but unadventurous travel magazine, and my boss had just handed me an assignment I was certain was a prank. miss naturism

I did not photograph her body. I photographed her hands—resting at her sides, fingers slightly curled, as if still holding the warmth of her words. I photographed the feet of the young woman with the mastectomy scar, pressing into the moss. I photographed the old truck driver’s back as he bent to pick a wild strawberry, the vertebrae like a string of smooth stones.

I flew to the Côte d’Azur, rented a tiny car, and drove inland to a valley where the air smelled of thyme and pine resin. The naturist resort was a collection of low, whitewashed buildings tucked into a hillside. No fences, no high walls. Just a winding path down to a river where people swam in the golden light of late afternoon. On the first day, I kept my camera in my bag

My anxiety about nudity melted into a stranger anxiety: I was the only one hiding.

“Miss Naturism,” he said, sliding a thin file across his desk. “The annual pageant in the south of France. Get the spirit of it. Not the… uh, anatomy. The spirit.” They were just people: reading, playing pétanque, peeling

When she finished, nobody clapped. There was just a long, soft silence, and then a man near the riverbank began to weep quietly, and someone else handed him a handkerchief.