Portraits of young women in their twenties.
A return to Roland Barthes' Camera Lucida
Peter Bialobrzeski photographs cities from a personal point of view.
Fotografiska to expand to Berlin, Miami, and Shanghai, becoming the world’s largest private art museum.
Head On Photo Festival Announces 2021 Photo Award Winners
Workforce shows the globalised economy
Oil Sands, Monuments, Mountain-tops to Moonscapes, and Russian Rust Belt
Edward Burtynsky Announced as Outstanding Contribution to Photography Recipient
About the role of collaboration in documentary photography
About the violence of the waters
Photo works with the physical aspect of nature as the central theme.
Lost Family Portraits is a project about broken families of Syrian refugees in Lebanon.
Black Waves is an expressionistic and metaphorical project that explores the dark depths of grief
Paris Photo 2021
A well-printed overview of the body of work of Deana Lawson
Mathieu Asselin made an extensive study of the company Monsanto
Photographs of a damaged landscape in China used as a nuclear test site.
Winners: a photo series by Mary Gelman and a single photo by Sebnem Coskun’s
A book about the Cuban Soul.
Discussion about social theory and photographic aesthetics.
Hollywood Icons & Stars in Manfred Baumanns new photo book
My images move between what is real and dream
Christelle Boulé made experimental photograms of a herbarium
The series Between two worlds explores themes of metamorphism, transformation, ascension.
The photo portrays the Ceremonial Court in Education City of Doha (Qatar)
Book about the transition of an adolescent daughter into adulthood.
A book about the Armenian community in Calcutta
Fotografiska Talinn opens “This Empty World. Inherit the Dust" from Nick Brandt. The series address the destruction of the East African natural world.
Postcards of the British Empire
This essay contrasts the presumed correlation between knowledge and photographic documents.
Photographs about the grief after the years-long battle between the government and the Shining Path.
Sasha Wolf asked 40 photographers how they conceptualize their work.
I use present-day visual language and techniques
Elliott Erwitt shows iconic platinum prints of women, children and dogs in Hong Kong
Charlotte Schmitz made Polaroids of refugees and had them write their stories.
Happy Farmer by Rafid Yasar, Bangladesh chosen as best signal work
I study the depth of the human soul
Shortlist announced by Festival of Ethical Photography
The book Paradise City illustrates metaphors for the utopian urge of us all
Artist Anna Ostoya’s visual interpretation of a lecture by political theorist Chantal Mouffe
The series Übergang (transition) of Grit Schwerdtfeger shows the passing of our time into an unknown future.
Dessert First! chronicles Quevedo's travels across the United States.
13 photographers from Austria, Belgium, Benin, Cambodia, Japan, Lebanon, Mexico, Nigeria, South Africa, Switzerland, USA
A story about migrant workers during lockdown
I want to see what my father saw, and I want him to see what I see
Here, I've come across the morning fogs, the rivers, the birds and the trees.
Sorry for the Lack of Contact—this phrase has become a recurring refrain in the past few years of my life.
For me, photography is more than a visual medium—it is a profound exploration of humanity, culture, and identity.
My photography is artistic and based on long exposure that allows me to melt different layers of images to create a pictorial effect.
What is religion and what is faith? What is the connection between the two?
Contemporary China resembles a runaway high-speed train, leaving my memories and language trailing behind.
In Artdoc Photo Magazine Issue #5 2020, we bring stories that treat different aspects of human life. Andres Serrano photographed homeless people in the streets of Brussels. Gregg Segal shows children from all over the world surrounded by the food they eat. Nelson Morales brings his project about muxes, people considered to be a third gender. The exhibition Human Beings, not Human Skins, is an answer to the global phenomenon of racism. The essay The Selfie as a Neoliberal Commodity explains why we take selfies.
Art photography is a compelling blend of creativity and visual storytelling, transcending traditional photography to stir the imagination and evoke emotions. It goes beyond capturing moments, using images to communicate ideas, provoke thought, and establish a deep connection with viewers. This guide explores the essence of art photography, revealing its role as a window into human experience and a reflection of societal issues. You’ll discover its power as a communication tool and its ability to merge art with documentary photography. Dive in to understand this expressive art form and unleash your creative potential through the lens.
We have to understand photography as a language. A photograph is an image in which various signs are embedded, just like texts have words. Words form a sentence, and the sentences together tell a story. We can read pictures the way we can read a book. We can search in the photograph and look for the meaning. But in a picture, there are no words and sentences. We have to grasp meaning from the totality of the image, in which every detail plays a part. In this guide, you will learn how to read images and the way the photographer produces meaning in photographs.
A photo project is more than just a collection of images—it's a unique narrative told through a harmonious blend of style, emotion, message, subject, and technique. Each photograph within the series works together to convey a compelling story. By approaching your photo series with the same care and intention as you would a written story, you can create a powerful visual narrative. Unlock the secrets to creating captivating photo projects with our comprehensive guide. Start creating your unique photo project today. In this guide, you will learn to develop a distinctive and personal visual language that sets your work apart. Learn how to select and refine subjects that form the foundation of your photo projects, and you will master the art of constructing a cohesive and compelling photo series that tells a powerful story.
Securing a spot in a gallery is a highly sought-after accomplishment for many photographers in the ever-evolving art world. The significance of such an achievement is not limited to the mere display of artwork but extends to the attainment of recognition. Recognition in the art world is crucial as it validates an artist's work, increases their reputation, and opens doors to new opportunities. This guide delves into the nuanced art of gallery representation, offering practical and actionable advice to art photographers on gaining their audience's attention and admiration, thereby increasing their chances of recognition.
Beyond the Frame brings together art photographers who push the boundaries of storytelling through innovative and imaginative perspectives.
The Life Today exhibition celebrates the beauty, complexity, and diversity of life in all its forms.
The Unobserved" showcases photographers who are inspired to uncover the extraordinary within the ordinary, revealing the hidden beauty in everyday moments.
The 'Expressive Nature' online group exhibition invites you on an immersive journey into the emotional and artistic resonances of the natural world.
This online photo exhibition, Invisible Threads, delves into the subtle and often overlooked bonds that form the fabric of our existence.
Human Stories is an online photography exhibition that aims to capture and convey the essence of the human experience through documentary storytelling.
Annie Leibovitz SUMO
The first book to celebrate the full breadth of the Starn twins’ innovative photographic career. Defying categorization, Doug and Mike Starn combine traditionally separate disciplines such as science, sculpture, photography, painting, video, and installation.
Message from the Exterior explores the ruins and remains of failed attempts to live in the desert’s harsh environments, depicting abandoned houses – small, often eccentric huts, both humorous and a little forlorn. Ruwedel examines the desert regions east of Los Angeles as a palimpsest of cultural and natural histories, presenting an inventory of a particular, and poignant, form of vernacular architecture; each structure might be read as a clue to the lives of anonymous individuals, and the impulse to create a home in the wilderness, however transitory.
The poetic universe of Spanish photographers duo Albarrán Cabrera is presented here through a dreamscape journey in the land of birds. Between reality and illusion, their photographs questions our relationship to the tangible world and vibrate gently through a wide palette and different photographic techniques: platinum and palladium prints, cyanotypes, gelatin prints, and pigmented printing.
Roger Grasas Ha Artz
Ukraine – Hundred Hidden Faces
Paul Graham Troubled Land
As part of the EMOP (European Month of Photography) and on the occasion of Dieter Appelt's 90th birthday, Lempertz in Berlin is showing a selection of his black and white photographs from the last 50 years, including multi-part works from the work groups ‘Erinnerungsspur’, ‘Tableau Oppedette’ and ‘Salzufersequenz’.
Following the success of Cross Road Blues (2016–2020) which captured still moments of people waiting at crossroads, Kellett continues his exploration of the urban environment with his latest series, Fountains.
Experimental Photo Festival 2025. The biggest world event for avant-garde photography. Barcelona will host 68 workshops and 21 free exhibitions during the Experimental PhotoFestival.
We are thrilled to announce the dates for the tenth edition of Photo London in 2025. Building on the resounding success of our ninth edition, which welcomed more than 120 exhibitors and a record number of collectors and institutional groups, the Fair will return to Somerset House from 15-18 May (VIP Preview 14 May).
Since the 1990s, Eileen Perrier has used photographic portraiture to forge connections between people, acknowledging the profound value of being seen.
Foam presents Father, an exhibition by artist Diana Markosian (Moscow, 1989). The exhibition captures Markosian’s journey of reconnection with her estranged father, expressed through a mixture of documentary photographs, family snapshots, archival material, along with Markosian’s diaristic writing. Father is an intimate portrayal of estrangement, reconnection, and the power of photography to capture complex emotions.
Founded in 1971, Fotostiftung Schweiz is a private non-profit foundation, devoted to preserving, researching and conveying photographic works.
Each book that STANLEY/BARKER publishes is produced with the utmost care.
Dewi Lewis Publishing is best known as a photobook publisher