Michael Christopher Brown will never forget the first time he experienced armed conflict. He was documenting the Libyan conflict in 2011 when tragedy struck.
After reading Stephen Mayes’ essay on the end of photography (Time, 8/25/15) I couldn’t help but respond. To begin with, his main proposition is that “in the future…
Earlier this morning, CNN announced that it would show the video once every hour. The news organization published it online with a warning. The New York Times has not shared the video but did link to a YouTube version of it in the main story.
As Gustavo Jononovich documented, the bounty of natural resources in Latin America can sustain a community, but also destroy it through pollution and overdevelopment.
Once again, it’s that time of year for photographers, agency reps, editors and groupies to descend on the French city of Perpignan to celebrate the world’s oldest international photojournalism…
Many years ago, I had the pleasure of seeing the late Chris Hondros speak at the Eddie Adams Workshop. During his presentation, he showed an entire of sequence of images that led up to this 2005 image of a 5-year-old Samar Hassan with blood covered hands
Drawing from his experiences across the Tokyo (and international) photography scene, Ihiro Hayami offers his thoughts on the power of the medium to describe the world around us
For the one-year anniversary of the armed conflict in Gaza and Israel, the New York Times launched an immersive series “Walking in War’s Path,” telling the story of the aftermath focalized through eight individual subjects and their environments—a series of virtual roads for an online audience.
A New S Takes Center Stage Unveiled at Photokina 2014 in September of that year, Leica S(007) availability was announced almost a year later, on August 25, 2015. That’s a long gestation period. This is the third generation Leica S, joining the S2 of 2009
For the third year in a row, we’re thrilled to present six professional development Luminance seminars at Photoville on Friday, September 11th in New York City! Photoville’s pop up photo destination in the Uplands of Pier 5 in Brooklyn Bridge Park is an a
Sergey Novikov is a Moscow-based, Russian art documentary photographer who has created a conceptual project about the 42 closed cities in Russia. This series reveals unmapped cities where residents were required to keep their whereabouts private and now h
NPR’s Rachel Martin speaks with Alex Potter, a young American photographer in Yemen’s largest city Sanaa. She is bearing witness to the terrible human toll of Yemen’s civil war.
The Land Art movement was part of the anti-gallery uprising of iconoclastic artists in the 1960s and 1970s. This new film by James Crump is an excellent primer, and it features the movement’s…
If you get too (or completely) distracted by Trump, either through offendedness or amusement from the farce, you’re going to miss the deeper take-away here.
James Whitlow Delano The Little People: Equatorial Rainforest Project In the Eden-like rainforests that once clothed the equator, multinational corporations are quietly stealing the resources of po…
William Widmer has been photographing levee breach sites and taking a broad look at what the Bayou and New Orleans neighborhoods look like ten years after the storm.