Christian Werner74The Yezidi religion is one of the oldest. Since its founding years 74 genocides committed against them. The youngest and most systematic done by the IS terrorist militia. The Yazi…
A magnificent volume curated with insight and appreciation for a true master of his art. Magnum photographer David Hurn’s rendering of the 1960s encompasses both Hollywood screen idols and East End sun-seekers; headline news, alongside rituals unchanged for centuries
Discover the life and work of photographer Pedro E. Guerrero, a Mexican American, born and raised in segregated Mesa, AZ. Discover the life and work o…
The KARMA POLICE program is detailed in newly released Snowden docs published on The Intercept; it began as a project to identify every listener to every Internet radio station (to find people list…
“I can’t ever unsee that.” Many of the people who watched that video can’t ever unsee that. And surely, the photographer who captured that live-stream of blood and body parts and hysteria can’t ever unsee that, either.
Editions lamaindonne presents the work of Ljubiša Danilovic in this book entitled Le Desert Russe (The Russian Desert). As the author explains, “By 2050, Russia will have lost a third of its current population. The largest country in the world will then have just a hundred million citizens.
For photojournalist Louie Palu, his five years covering the Afghanistan conflict have marked him for life. While the Toronto native was taking hundreds of pictures for news outlets, he was keeping …
The phrase joins Cory Arcangel’s “What a misunderstanding” as one that can be used to caption any New Yorker cartoon — a fact discovered by Frank Chimero, the Louis Pasteur …
When I took this picture, I thought China would always be like this. Wrong, of course. I also imagined I would always shoot black-and-white film and be in my 20s.
What’s the current state of photojournalism, and where is the industry headed? That’s what a major survey recently attempted to answer, and the result is
A new study released by Oxford University’s Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism in association with World Press Photo offers a conflicting view of the lives of today’s photojournalists.
One of the greatest challenges for photography is not only to describe the present but predict the future—this series casts its gaze to the ravaging effects that rising sea levels will surely have on the already crowded shores of Bangladesh
The Ozark backwoods are a place you feel — dark nooks in the woods and the banks of rivers, the smell of wet life and decay, a steady insect hum, the mysteries of darkness and light
Thomas de Wouters’ square, black-and white images of Ukraine look as if they were made by a 1960s-era New York street photographer set loose on the modern-day front between Russia and Ukraine.