Schön! alive 3 | less than zero

Sebastian Copeland lives between land, sea and ice, but he grew up surrounded by lights, cameras and music. His French father was a prominent composer, and his English mother a leading producer for commercial agencies. After a stint as a child actor, Copeland went on to become a production/camera assistant for Tony and Ridley Scott, amongst others. He graduated from UCLA’s film school with a summa cum laude and was immediately signed up as a commercial director, whilst also shooting celebrity portraits on the side. All this, as well as a brief marriage to Brigitte Nielsen, suggested that a career in Hollywood was a given.

Yet, in his heart, Copeland harboured a deep love for astronomy, geology and glaciology. His fine arts degree was coupled with studies in earth sciences. On safari, during a visit to his grandfather in Swaziland, the 11-year-old Copeland received his first point-and-shoot camera. Later, he “borrowed” his mother’s Olympus OM-2 and then the replacement Nikon F3. He has since won a Tokyo International Foto Award and three International Photography Awards, but as he tells us, “In the end, I didn’t choose photography… Photography chose me.”

Read the full interview and feature now in Schön! alive 3, available in print and in our online shop.

 

Sebastian Copeland on the way to the North Pole, 2009.
Arctic sea ice in winter presents relentless, man-sized challenges. With rescue uncertain amid rapidly
changing weather, shifting terrain and temperatures plunging to minus 60°C, it becomes clear
why the North Pole is considered one of the toughest expeditions on Earth.

Monument Valley, Greenland, 2023.
Timing is everything. Grounded the previous summer and trapped by winter ice, the iceberg
waited for spring’s first melt. After five weeks, an early thaw, mirror-like reflections
and overcast skies aligned, proof that patience can define the image.

Walking towards the North Pole at 86° North, 2009.
If Arctic winter sea ice could speak, it would scream of pain. Shaped by currents, winds and tides,
the ice forms a thin, shifting crust over a deep, frigid sea. Constantly breaking and moving,
it drifts like a vicious treadmill, often carrying you away from the Pole itself.

Sebastian Copeland.
Santa Maria del Camí, Mallorca 2025
photography. Sege Hoeltschi

Schön! alive  3, now available in print and in our online shop and at Amazon
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interview. William Annesley
photography. Sebastian Copeland