When an influx of South Sudanese refugees were resettled in a small Sydney suburb, Conor Ashleigh began to document how his new neighbors adjusted to life in Australia.
Gabriele Orlini I’m Africa You are confusing the circulatory system with this maze of meandering, twisted like cells of the brain – wire meshes and tangles, resemble memory – each…
Born in the great Canadian prairies, Edward Burtynsky very quickly understood the need to look at the impact of industrial development in a different way.
She takes these shots without the slightest pretention, simply for the fun, posting them on Instagram. The huge number of “likes” she received boosted her confidence and now in the middle of her frenetic work day rushing from one meeting to another, finding solutions for the endless changes in the magazine’s contents, or having to find a different approach, she invents these moments of exquisite imagery.
The long read: Caesar, the Syrian military photographer who smuggled shocking evidence of torture out of Assad’s dungeons, tells his story for the first time
As part of the Transition, Social Landscape Project, Alain Willaume was invited to reflect on threats related to shale gas exploitation projects in the Karoo desert region of South Africa. Echoing this uncertain future, he invents an evanescent metaphor and interrogates a land haunted by suspicions and anxieties emanating from the inhabitants met by the wayside
Philippe Lopparelli offers a close-up study of the electronic generation yet chooses not cover the phenomenon in an “objective” manner, instead prefering to weave personal connexions
When, in 2007, my path crossed that of Tendance Floue, they had behind them a long wake of noise, flashes, actions, and laughs, but mostly of photographs. Their images were already illuminating flares aimed at all corners of reality. I had then sensed that one of the possible and especially pertinent uses of photography was being invented there. And I found that this experiment was well in its place.
When New York City proposed rezoning a gritty commercial strip in the South Bronx, the Bronx Photo League set out to document the men and women who fear they may be pushed aside.
Enter the far-flung (yet familiar) world of schoolchildren on the Eastern Cape and discover a richly portrayed environment, ripe for interpretation and even open-ended fantasy
Nine pioneering photographers, with images spanning 90 years, are celebrated in a new exhibit at Throckmorton Fine Art in New York. “Mexican Photography: Women Pioneers I,” which runs through Nov. 14, includes black-and-white images from some of Mexico’s most celebrated photographers, though most are not famous outside the art world.
Porter Yates is a Brooklyn, New York-based photographer who takes his camera to the remote corners of the world, documenting the beauty and uniqueness of
Acclaimed Japanese photojournalist Kikujiro Fukushima passed away on September 24th, 2015, after suffering a stroke at the age of 94. Fukushima was known
As hundreds of photographers descend on Paris this week to capture the latest fashion trends, Landon Nordeman prefers to turn his camera on his subjects with unexpected angles, patterns and textures.