The How-To Guide to Self-Publish Your Own Photobooks
Bruno Ceschel of “Self Publish, Be Happy” shares his best tips
via Time: http://time.com/4040880/guide-self-publish-photobook/
Bruno Ceschel of “Self Publish, Be Happy” shares his best tips
via Time: http://time.com/4040880/guide-self-publish-photobook/
The intersection between brands trying to capitalize on social media activity and people’s expectation of privacy has become murky.
His iconic images of the Vietnam War helped shift public support for the war, but Tim Page says the game has completely changed since then.
via ABC News: http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-09-18/legendary-vietnam-war-photojournalist-tim-page-on-his-career/6786642
The diarist, Denis Roche, often portrayed himself taking pictures of himself, to show the overlaying of these two self-representing practices. His photographic self-portraits might correspond to the creational desire to stage writing, or at least to a constant questioning between literature and photography.
Stirring, hard-earned wisdom from a photographer committed to his craft and to a deeply engaged life on the road
via LensCulture: https://www.lensculture.com/articles/blink-network-not-for-the-faint-of-heart-views-from-a-freelancer
via Correspondent: http://blogs.afp.com/correspondent/?post/photographer-in-a-town-turned-into-a-cemetery
In 2012 Austin Tice answered a calling: to become a war photographer and tell the world what was happening in Syria. But then he went missing.
via Texas Monthly: http://www.texasmonthly.com/articles/the-road-to-damascus/
A Glimpse of Burn Diary BurnDiary is about to have featured 100 photographers in more than two years.Personal stories, details, places, landscapes… all through the eyes of the photograph…
via burn magazine: http://www.burnmagazine.org/essays/2015/09/a-glimpse-of-burn-diary/
For the latest edition of MATTE, 20 photographers submitted work that they loved but for whatever reason, have never found a home.
via Vice: http://www.vice.com/read/matte-magazine-presents-the-homeless-issue-405
After witnessing the dangerous journey of migrants traveling from the Arab Spring to Italy in 2011, the photographer Guilio Piscitelli spent the next four years chronicling the refugee crisis.
via Lens Blog: http://lens.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/09/18/photographing-europes-migrant-crisis-year-after-year/?module=BlogPost-Title&version=Blog
Philippe Dudouit photographs the city of Ubari in Libya’s lawless Fezzan region
via Time: http://time.com/4015398/blood-and-human-trafficking-in-the-dustbowl-of-libya/
A new book and exhibit explore the evolution of Japanese photography
Open See follows refugee and immigrant populations traveling from war-torn, economically devastated and often AIDS-ravaged countries to make new homes in Europe. Goldberg spent four years documenting the stories of Greek refugees from Iraq, Somalia, Congo, Ukraine, Albania, Russia, Ethiopia, Egypt, Bangladesh, Pakistan, China, Sudan, Kenya, Kurdistan, Afghanistan, Bulgaria, Palestine and Moldavia.
After fourteen years of being immersed in the bloody wars of our era, C.J. Chivers came home.
via Esquire: http://www.esquire.com/news-politics/a37838/end-of-war-1015/
As the 2015 baseball season starts winding to a close, we caught up with Brad Mangin, accomplished sports photographer and longtime friend of PhotoShelter. Brad has now published four wonderful photography books — one titled Instant Baseball featuring his
via PhotoShelter Blog: http://blog.photoshelter.com/2015/09/publishing-photo-books-success-tips-from-brad-mangin/
As a former Art Producer, I have always been drawn to personal projects because they are the sole vision of the photographer and not an extension of an art director, photo editor, or graphic designer. This column, “The Art of the Personal Project” will fe
via A Photo Editor: http://aphotoeditor.com/2015/09/17/the-art-of-the-personal-project-jim-golden/
Amsterdam opens its doors and gives itself over to the world of photography
via LensCulture: https://www.lensculture.com/articles/unseen-photo-fair-preview-unseen-photo-fair-2015
The awards of the international photographic competition La Quatrième Image 2015 were given to Maxim Dondyuk (1st prize), Mathilde Geldhof (2nd prize), Michael Goldgruber (3rd Prize) and Gillian Hyland (4th prize)
Photography in the Age of Disaster Tourism
“Exploring the mendacity of memory and its relation to youth” through nostalgia-filled portraiture of rural Idaho’s innocent and imaginative next generation
via LensCulture: https://www.lensculture.com/articles/antonio-ysursa-memory-stirred