2026-02-22
Lens Culture

Beyond the Decisive Moment: “Dislocated Presences” Rethinks Street Photography

Training his camera on in-between moments and gestures, David Masoko’s tender take on street photography explores the tensions between visibility and privacy in an image-saturated world.

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Lens Culture

When Words Fall Short: Torrance York Uses Photography to Navigate Life With Parkinson’s

In this LensCulture interview, Torrance York reflects on how photography became a tool for understanding, acceptance, and connection after her Parkinson’s diagnosis.

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Lens Culture

The Haircut: Portraits of a Transformation with Actor Ian McKellen

85-year-old actor Ian McKellen let his hair and beard grow out to play the ionic role of Shakespeare’s Falstaff — after the final performance, he finally stepped out of character and back to himself.

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Lens Culture

Grace

In their first artistic collaboration together, Scott Offen and his wife Grace explore ageing, gender and creativity through a seven-year portrait project shaped by intimacy and play.

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Lens Culture

L is for Look: A Brief History of Fun Photography in Children’s Books

Charting the history of children’s photobooks, the exhibition “L is for Look” takes the viewer on an interactive adventure into the dynamic and responsive world of storytelling made possible by combining photographs and words.

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Lens Culture

A Walk in the Park? — Street Portraits from NYC

A deeply human collection of street portraits from Washington Square Park, revealing the quiet vulnerability behind bold self-expression.

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Lens Culture

Advice for Portrait Photographers

One of America’s leading photographers offers his insights about making great photographic portraits.

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Lens Culture

Viridescent, Afire: An Artistic View of Our Changing Seas

Drawing on a myriad of sources spanning science and mythology, Małgorzata Stankiewicz weaves together text, cyanotypes and satellite images into a poetic, immersive publication that tells the complex and urgent story of rising algal bloom in the Baltic Sea.

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British Journal of Photography
On the Cusp: Announcing the winners of Female in Focus 2025

On the Cusp: Announcing the winners of Female in Focus 2025

Laetitia Vançon’s The Other Battlefields and Giya Makondo-Wills’ New Scramble will be exhibited at 10 14 Gallery and PhotoIreland, alongside single image winners including Ana Flores, Esther N’sapu, Ada Marino and Karen Paz Gonzalez
The post On the Cusp: Announcing the winners of Female in Focus 2025 appeared first on 1854 Photography.

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British Journal of Photography
Kalpesh Lathigra’s The Lives We Dream in Passing

Kalpesh Lathigra’s The Lives We Dream in Passing

Born and brought up in the UK but returning to his parents’ homeland to make and show new work, Kalpesh Lathigra sidesteps the ‘diaspora dialogue’, says curator Veeranganakumari Solanki
The post Kalpesh Lathigra’s The Lives We Dream in Passing appeared first on 1854 Photography.

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British Journal of Photography
The first exhibition in Italy to focus on the HIV-Aids crisis

The first exhibition in Italy to focus on the HIV-Aids crisis

VIVONO brings together a range of artists to examine the campaigns and communities of an overlooked era, from the 80s and 90s
The post The first exhibition in Italy to focus on the HIV-Aids crisis appeared first on 1854 Photography.

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British Journal of Photography
In Florida Boys, Josh Aronson finds magic in the encounter between young men and nature

In Florida Boys, Josh Aronson finds magic in the encounter between young men and nature

Travelling Florida with his sitters, the photographer builds Arcadian portraits that recast masculinity as fluid, gentle and communal
The post In Florida Boys, Josh Aronson finds magic in the encounter between young men and nature appeared first on 1854 Photography.

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British Journal of Photography
Documenting the overlooked legacy of debutante balls for Black American youth

Documenting the overlooked legacy of debutante balls for Black American youth

In Social Season, Miranda Barnes’ debut photo book published by MACK’s imprint Important Flowers, cotillions are spaces where teens tenderly display pride and aspiration
The post Documenting the overlooked legacy of debutante balls for Black American youth appeared first on 1854 Photography.

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British Journal of Photography
The Metropolitan Museum receives a grand gift of global photography

The Metropolitan Museum receives a grand gift of global photography

The 2025 Wellcome Photography Prize highlights global health challenges through powerful images spanning domestic abuse, climate migration and microscopic disease
The post The Metropolitan Museum receives a grand gift of global photography appeared first on 1854 Photography.

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British Journal of Photography
Unmapping the image: Elsa Leydier distorts photography’s authority

Unmapping the image: Elsa Leydier distorts photography’s authority

The French-born artist unmakes images, intervening in their materiality to expose racist, sexist and capitalist tropes and challenge dominant Western aesthetics – all while questioning her own gaze
The post Unmapping the image: Elsa Leydier distorts photography’s authority appeared first on 1854 Photography.

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British Journal of Photography
Through the gates of hell and heaven: Dean Majd’s New York odyssey

Through the gates of hell and heaven: Dean Majd’s New York odyssey

A decade-long photographic record of grief, masculinity, and community in Queens, Hard Feelings traces how intimacy endures amid loss
The post Through the gates of hell and heaven: Dean Majd’s New York odyssey appeared first on 1854 Photography.

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Dodho

Aboard Chronicles Simona Bonanno Captures Anonymity in Floating Cities

ABOARD Chronicles takes us on a visual journey into the fascinating anonymity of a cosmopolitan society floating at sea. The series explores the anonymity of passengers and crew members inhabiting cruise ships — floating cities where people live for limited yet asymmetrical periods of time.

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Dodho

Bahraini Farmers by Mustafa AbdulHadi A Story of Tradition and Rural Life

Habib Abu Hussein is a Bahraini farmer. His story began when, at an early age, he bought a cow without consulting his father. When his father found out, Habib was beaten. Despite this, he insisted on raising the cow, and from that first animal the cattle later multiplied.

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Dodho

Foreseeable Cache by Debe Arlook Merging Inner and Outer Landscapes Through Multiple Exposure

Foreseeable Cache is a conjured term for remembering what the soul knows. This work is a nod to the artist’s spiritual journey and a visualization of what meditation feels like. Just as water sustains life, meditation is crucial for nurturing awareness, staying grounded, and fostering personal growth.

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Dodho

Danilo Coluccio’s Poetic Wedding Photography: Light, Color, and Symbolic Narrative in Contemporary Fine Art

In photography there is no universal light, only the harmony that arises between the gaze and the atmosphere encountered in a given moment. The lessons of Caravaggio and Rembrandt, that movement from shadow toward clarity, remain a silent guide in his visual formation.

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Dodho

What Is Parataxis in Photography? Meaning, Examples, and Its Impact on Visual Storytelling

Parataxis in photography rejects linear storytelling by placing images side by side without forcing them into a single narrative. Meaning emerges through juxtaposition, tension, and association, inviting the viewer to actively construct connections rather than passively receive a predefined message.

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Dodho

Night Photography: 5 Contemporary Photographers of Urban and Landscape Scenes

Night photography reshapes perception rather than limiting it. In these five projects, absence becomes presence, architecture becomes sculptural, landscapes turn intimate, and time itself leaves a visible trace. Darkness does not conceal. It reveals.

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Dodho

Josef Koudelka: Prague 1968, Exile and Black and White Photography

Josef Koudelka turned exile into a visual language. From Prague 1968 to vast panoramic landscapes, his black and white photography captures tension, memory and political fracture with uncompromising intensity.

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Dodho

Who Built the Myth of Lunch atop a Skyscraper?

Taken during the construction of 30 Rockefeller Plaza in 1932, Lunch atop a Skyscraper remains one of the most famous images in American history. This essay examines its uncertain authorship, its staged promotional context, and the historical realities of immigrant steelworkers who helped build the New York skyline during the Great Depression.

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ASBX
Yorgos Lanthimos  i shall sing these songs beautifully

Yorgos Lanthimos i shall sing these songs beautifully

So, I’ve never watched a single one of Lanthimos’s films. Maybe this will change in the near future. Dunno. I am aware that I do not know a Dog’s tooth from a Frog’s gooch. In order to subvert my programming, which some of my more learned friends insisting that I am already in denial over […]

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ASBX
Lua Ribeira Agony in the Garden

Lua Ribeira Agony in the Garden

Agony in the Garden. Parables. Metaphors. Incisive mythology within the realms of the contemporary political landscape of Europe in the 2020s. To reduce Lua Ribeira’s work to any single motif is an exercise in futility. Instead, the analysis must stem from the aggregate means of its parts. Of course, one cannot simply resign the work […]

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ASBX
Nearest Truth The Dailies Workshop 3 Athens Bryan Schutmaat Matthew Genitempo Brad Feuerhelm

Nearest Truth The Dailies Workshop 3 Athens Bryan Schutmaat Matthew Genitempo Brad Feuerhelm

I am writing this dispatch from Athens, Greece, where we are currently on the third day of shooting. The following work is part of the Nearest Truth Workshops, The Dailies workshop, which includes instructors Bryan Schutmaat, Matthew Genitempo, and Brad Feuerhelm. The workshop outline is detailed as follows: Dailies is a newspaper term for a daily […]

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ASBX
Charles Johnstone The Court At High Elms

Charles Johnstone The Court At High Elms

  Sometimes, all it takes is a corner and a series of evaporating shadows to serve as a conduit to greater understanding of the built environment and all the human activity that has transpired within it. In studying Charles Johnstone’s court photography, what is exceptionally evident is the simplicity with which the rendering of space […]

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ASBX
Nearest Truth The Dailies Workshop 2 Athens Bryan Schutmaat Matthew Genitempo Brad Feuerhelm

Nearest Truth The Dailies Workshop 2 Athens Bryan Schutmaat Matthew Genitempo Brad Feuerhelm

I am writing this dispatch from Athens, Greece, where we are currently on the second day of shooting. The following work is part of the Nearest Truth Workshops, The Dailies workshop, which includes instructors Bryan Schutmaat, Matthew Genitempo, and Brad Feuerhelm. The workshop outline is detailed as follows: Dailies is a newspaper term for a daily […]

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ASBX
Nearest Truth The Dailies Workshop Athens Bryan Schutmaat Matthew Genitempo Brad Feuerhelm

Nearest Truth The Dailies Workshop Athens Bryan Schutmaat Matthew Genitempo Brad Feuerhelm

Day 1, February 4, 2026   I am writing this dispatch from Athens, Greece, where we are currently on the second day of shooting. The following work is part of the Nearest Truth Workshops, The Dailies workshop, which includes instructors Bryan Schutmaat, Matthew Genitempo, and Brad Feuerhelm. The workshop outline is detailed as follows: Dailies is […]

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ASBX
Mark Armijo McKnight Posthume

Mark Armijo McKnight Posthume

Imago Mortis translates to “Image of Death.” It is a concept that has representations as far back as the Middle Ages, likely exploding across imagery as an extension of the mood following years of bubonic plague, which killed off nearly 1/3 to 2/3’s of Europe’s population over the course of a decade. Over the years […]

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Suvremena hrvatska fotografija
Recorded in Time and Space

Recorded in Time and Space

The black-and-white photograph is framed so that most of it is taken up by a high fence made of wooden slats. Our vantage point, just as that of the photographer…

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Suvremena hrvatska fotografija
Jerman is Unique.

Jerman is Unique.

I say: Whatever you do, as artists, be brave. But he says: This is not my world. Together, these catchphrases denote the content we fell into in the midst of…

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Suvremena hrvatska fotografija
I absolutely reject the social exploitation of concepts [1]

I absolutely reject the social exploitation of concepts [1]

Often in the evening, when everything is quiet and all the movement around me has died down, I look towards one of my living room walls. It took some time…

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Suvremena hrvatska fotografija
The Most Beautiful Place in the World

The Most Beautiful Place in the World

Contemporary Slovenian photography, or at least the selected fragment of it was presented to the domestic public in another exhibition of the Croatian Photographic Union, this time held in KlovićeviDvori….

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Suvremena hrvatska fotografija
Faces of Time

Faces of Time

In 1929, German photographer August Sander (1876-1964) published a book with sixty photographs portraying the people of his time. In genre terms, one might call these photographs portraits which either…

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Suvremena hrvatska fotografija
Somewhere

Somewhere

She began at this time to describe landscape as if anything she saw was a natural phenomenon, a thing existent in itself, and she found it, this exercise, very interesting and…

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Suvremena hrvatska fotografija
Media-logged journey– pleasures and asceticism of transcendence

Media-logged journey– pleasures and asceticism of transcendence

Media-logged journey as transcendence of “the imminent conditions of consciousness” and the naïve art-phenomenology of “reality” Đukić versus Altamira and On Kawara Assuming reality is real, its media-trace/manifestation are also…

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Suvremena hrvatska fotografija
Constructing an identity through the family archive  / Archon of the family heritage

Constructing an identity through the family archive / Archon of the family heritage

Where does the need to build an identity by reconstructing a family history come from? What is it in the past that is so strong that we could possibly rely…

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