Category: Editor’s Choice

  • A Photo Editor – Sam Jones Interview Part 1

    Sam Jones Interview Part 1 – A Photo Editor

    I consider Sam Jones to be one of the top photographers in the country at shooting men. And there are plenty of people who shoot men as people or fashionable or sexy but very few who shoot them “manly,” which is something I love about Sam’s photography. S

    via A Photo Editor: http://www.aphotoeditor.com/2009/10/08/sam-jones-interview-part-1/

    I consider Sam Jones to be one of the top photographers in the country at shooting men. And there are plenty of people who shoot men as people or fashionable or sexy but very few who shoot them “manly,” which is something I love about Sam’s photography. So, that’s a very thin category that I put him in and of course he does a lot of things very well but I’ve worked with him a lot on covers and feature stories because he was at the top of that list.

  • Welcome to the World Press Photo Contest Archive

    2000.jpg


    Link: Welcome to the World Press Photo Contest Archive:

    For over fifty years the World Press Photo contest has captured images of our times. Our archive of winning photos is not only a record of more than half a century of human history, but a showcase of successive styles in photography and reportage.

    The archive gallery comprises some 10,000 images. It includes photos that have become icons, by some of the leading names in the profession. World Press Photo has put them online with the aim of sharing our knowledge, resources and experience with the widest possible network.

    This site was made possible with the support of the Mondriaan Foundation and VSB Foundation.

  • An M9 In Paris – A Field Review

    leica_m9_front.jpg


    Link: An M9 In Paris – A Field Review – Luminous Landscape:

    Choosing a Canon over a Nikon, an Olympus over a Pentax, or any other combination, comes down to matters of brand preference, feature comparisons, and personal whim. They all pretty much do the same thing, but of course with some differences in user interface, control placement and specific features, which may or may not appeal to any one individual. In addition there are a wide range of models (with new ones introduced every few months) to satisfy just about any budget. That’s fine. That’s the nature of the mass market and it means that we have some amazing cameras available to us at ever decreasing prices.

    But for some the camera that they use is about more than being a tool for getting a certain task done – whether its a feature magazine assignment or simply recording a family vacation. For these photographers the camera becomes an extension of their ability to see and record, a tool for actualizing that process. The tool and the process become inseparable. It is for photographers that approach their work in this manner, and who have developed an appreciation for a minimalist esthetic that the M Leica appeals.

  • A Conversation with Christopher Anderson – Conscientious


    Link: A Conversation with Christopher Anderson – Conscientious:

    After publishing my review of Christopher Anderson’s Capitolio, I ended up exchanging emails with him about the work and its purpose and reception. Things got so interesting that I thought this would be a great opportunity to take things public and to have a conversation with him on this blog.

  • Showcase: Sisyphean Days in Cuba – Lens Blog

    Picture 4.png


    Link: Showcase: Sisyphean Days in Cuba – Lens Blog – NYTimes.com:

    The words came to Ernesto Bazan as he stirred awake one morning in Palermo.

    “You need become a photographer.”

    Guided by that revelation, the 17-year-old boy decided his future.

  • 100Eyes Magazine – Chrisitna Poveda Tribute

    ven.jpg


    Link: 100Eyes: Photography Magazine and Photo Workshops for Emerging and Professional Photographers:

    French photojournalist and documentary film maker Christian Poveda was murdered on September 3rd in El Salvador, as he drove back from filming in La Campanera, a poor, overcrowded suburb and a Mara 18 stronghold. Arrests were made this past week that a jailed Maras gang-leader, who had reportedly tried to extort money from Poveda, who had made a 2008 documentary about the gang named “La Vida Loca.”

    This essay by Nanni Fontana is presented as a tribute to Poveda’s work, and the essay by Carlos Lopez-Barillas that follows intends to initiate a discussion on the changing landscape for documentary journalists.

    via: APhotoADay

  • lenscratch: Matt Stuart

    3 1.jpg


    Link: lenscratch: Matt Stuart:

    There’s nothing more fascinating than looking at candid shots of the unassuming public. Those shots become even more interesting when a skilled street photographer finds the sweet spot timing of the perfect juxtaposition. Matt Stuart, is one of those photographers.

  • Showcase: Deadly Streets – Lens Blog

    Picture 1.png


    Link: Showcase: Deadly Streets – Lens Blog – NYTimes.com:

    “Capitolio,” the new book on Venezuela by Magnum photographer Christopher Anderson, offers a stunning view into Caracas’s descent from its perch as one of Latin America’s most economically advanced, if unequal, cities into a place gripped by low-intensity chaos and fear.

  • The Visual Student

    Picture 1.png


    Link: The Visual Student:

    The Visual Student is a resource for students in all areas of visual journalism. We are starting from the ground up, so comments and suggestions are very welcome. In the coming weeks we will be adding more daily features and more resource links.

  • Boogie: His Camera, His Self – Lens Blog

    Picture 1.png


    Link: Showcase: His Camera, His Self – Lens Blog – NYTimes.com:

    Boogie hurried past me, chasing a butterfly. He waved his camera ahead of him as he attempted to catch a picture of it in flight. His shutter clicked ferociously as he focused on his mission with the glee of a child. For Boogie, a Serbian photographer, the streets of the world are his playground.

  • Q&A: JeongMee Yoon, Seoul

    JeongMee-Yoon_1 1.jpg


    Link: Q&A: JeongMee Yoon, Seoul:

    JeongMee Yoon is a photographer living and working in Seoul, South Korea. In 2006, she received her MFA from the School of Visual Arts in New York. This work is from her series, The Pink & Blue Project, which has been widely exhibited.

  • 44 Days: A Revolution Revisited – David Burnett

    007 1.jpg


    CLICK NOTE: Click on FEATURE GALLERY to see the photos. It’s VERY EASY to miss.
    Link: 44 Days: A Revolution Revisited – The Digital Journalist:

    In the case of these photographs, they have lived happily, cared for in the file cabinets at Contact Press Images in New York for the past three decades. Now and then a picture would be licensed but for the most part, as a body of work it remained relatively untouched. Then, about two years ago, I returned from a trip to find that a small conference room at the agency had been papered with 5″x7″ Xerox copies of dozens of photographs from the Revolution. They had been taped up in the timeline sequence they were shot in, and for the first time, I realized that I was looking at the whole story all at once. The progression of the story was laid out, and it made total sense. Jacques Menashe, a reporter with Contact, and Robert Pledge, the director, had, in my absence, put together this visual narrative in a way that really told the story. We worked from this point forward, sharpening details about what happened where, and on which day, cross referencing with both contemporary news accounts and books written about the Revolution. In the end, when we presented the package to the book division at National Geographic a year ago, it was pretty much ready to go. And once they signed on, there were dozens of little detail items that we wanted to make sure were right. Between those accounts, my caption envelopes, and my sometimes fading memory, we managed to structure the book layout in a form which tries to tell the story in the timeline that unfolded. It is a book of history. Yes, photography is memory, and whatever else is written about the Iranian Revolution, and the ways in which it became the precursor for much of what has happened in the Middle East in the last three decades, this book will remain to tell that story.

  • Hard Rain – Anthony Suau

    Link: World Press Photo:

    World Press Photo and Anthony Suau have jointly produced a multimedia presentation for the World Press Photo website. In Hard Rain, the title Suau gave to the project, he places his 20 years of working as a war correspondent in broad perspective. “I feel it is imperative when covering any war”, he says, “that you are clear on your intentions and know where and how your work will be seen.”

  • The Reporter’s Account: 4 Days With the Taliban – At War Blog


    Link: The Reporter’s Account: 4 Days With the Taliban – At War Blog – NYTimes.com:

    Stephen Farrell, a reporter for The New York Times, and Sultan M. Munadi, an Afghan journalist working with him, were kidnapped by the Taliban in northern Afghanistan on Saturday. In a British raid to free them early Wednesday, Mr. Munadi was killed. This is Mr. Farrell’s account of their four-day ordeal.

  • Razon

    Picture-3.jpg

    Razon:

    Razon is an international collective of visual storytellers pursuing stories independently, but sharing, inspiring, and motivating each other to seek and convey truths and reasons behind every story to be told.

    via APhotoADay

  • Behind the Scenes: To Publish or Not?

    Behind the Scenes: To Publish or Not? – Lens Blog – NYTimes.com:

    It is a scene from which many of us would naturally recoil, or at least avert our eyes: a grievously injured young man, fallen on a rough patch of earth; his open-mouthed and unseeing stare registering — who can know what? — horror or fear or shock; being tended desperately by two companions in what are the first moments of the final hours of his life.

    It is a scene that plays out daily among American troops in Afghanistan and Iraq, but one that has largely been unseen by the American public in eight years of war.

    On Friday, after a couple of weeks of intramural debate and over the objections of the young man’s father (supported by the defense secretary), The Associated Press released such a photograph, by Julie Jacobson.

  • Showcase: Neighborly Hatred – Lens Blog

    Picture 4 1.png

    Showcase: Neighborly Hatred – Lens Blog – NYTimes.com:

    PERPIGNAN, France — If you want to understand why Justyna Mielnikiewicz has spent eight years photographing border disputes and ethnic conflicts in the South Caucasus, you should know two stories from her childhood.

  • Showcase: Uneasy Congo – Lens Blog

    Picture-4.jpg

    Showcase: Uneasy Congo – Lens Blog – NYTimes.com:

    He has slept in churches in Congo for safety while photographing refugees fleeing their own homes. Though he is only 25 years old, Dominic Nahr’s photographs of those refuges and of Congo’s brutal conflict are being exhibited in Perpignan at Visa pour l’Image, the most important international photojournalism festival.

  • dispatches / Water Rights – Balazs Gardi

    Picture 5 1.png

    dispatches / Water Rights:

    Balazs Gardi, a Hungarian freelance photographer with VII Network, focuses on everyday life in communities facing humanitarian crises. Although he has won numerous awards for conflict photography, he is on a long-term project to capture water-related social tension and geopolitical disputes.