Michael Christopher Brown’s “Libyan Sugar” centers around the 2011 Libyan Revolution, detailed through photographs, journal entries, and written communication with family and colleagues. “Libyan Sugar” is a depiction of a youth uprising that quickly becam
By associate editor Elliot Smith, video by Adam Plowden: Newsshooter’s technical editor Matt Allard talks to F-Stop academy’s Den Lennie, one of the only people to have used Sony’s newly-announced A7s II camera. The camera combines the low light sensitivi
For Times photographers, New York serves as our canvas, and its people our palette. So we at the Lens blog decided to gather some of our favorite “slice of life” photos taken by current staff photographers and present them as part of a night of projections at this year’s Photoville festival. If you’re lucky enough to be near Brooklyn Bridge Park at 8 p.m. on Saturday, please join us.
This is John Vink’s first of an 11 part project concerning the wide-ranging subject of rice in Cambodia. His comprehensive exploration will address such issues as seasonal growing cycle, religion, research, tradition, commerce, social and economic impact, climate change issues and more.
Getty Images and Instagram have announced the winners of the first Getty Images Instagram Grant recognizing photographers for telling underreported stories.
Combining aerial and large-format photography, Andrew Moore aimed to capture the vast landscape of the 100th meridian line, and the stories of families connected to the land.
Iranian photographer Newsha Tavakolian will receive the 2015 Principal Prince Claus Award, a 100,000 Euro prize. She has pledged nearly half to charity.
The number of refugees landing on European shores this year has already topped 380,000 according to the UN, well ahead of the 215,000 that arrived in 2014, with months left in the year.
Peterson certainly has developed a style. His images have an intensity to them that can’t be achieved with mid-range or long lenses. And it’s a style that has suited him well over the years with clients that wanted someone who would bring “something different” to the table. I once assigned him to a college football game knowing full well, that I wasn’t going to see a single action picture when it came time to edit. And the results did not disappoint.
On a recent trip to Seattle, WA, Michael Reichmann Founder of LuLa, with Brooks Jensen, Publisher of Lens Work and Kevin Raber, Publisher of LuLa had a discussion about photography. Together they explored the different states of photography. During this
Photography is Pascal Maitre’s medium—he loves the magic of photographs and is fascinated by color. But above all, he sees himself as a reporter. The key to his work, he says, is the human connection. He tells me the photographs themselves are easy to take. Gaining access to people is the hard part. And, “Sans les gens il n’y a rien—without people, there is nothing,” he says.
These photos are from Jim Mangan’s upcoming book, ‘Magic Rocks, which will be released at the New York Art Book Fair as a continuation of his book ‘Bastard Child’ this September.
In ‘Uchronia,’ photographer Maciek Pozoga and musicologist Christopher Kirkley imagine what might have happened if a Malian emperor was actually the first person to get to the New World.
A series of zines produced by photographers in Singapore offer insider’s views of the country, ranging from transformations in its urban landscape to its social ills to the hidden history of one participant’s grandfather.
For more than four decades, Nick Nixon has worked methodically to create images, using a view camera and printing in the darkroom. A new retrospective of his work reminds him of the importance of slowing down.