A selection of 66 prints at David Zwirner in London celebrates the singular vision of Roy DeCarava, an artist devoted to making photography “break through a kind of literalness.”
These intimate portraits from Australia — each with a direct statement from the person photographed — crackle with the intensity of human connection and honesty.
Focusing his lens down below onto the streets to document the daily lives of street hawkers in Nigeria, Chukwudi Onwumere’s images explore the intersection between informal trade and public space.
Announcing a group show celebrating the richness and diversity of new contemporary photography, featuring award-winning photographers from 41 countries on six continents — May 20-22, 2022.
A new book by Aperture dives deep into the career of Judith Joy Ross, one of America’s leading portraitists, bringing together over 200 images to explore the sensitive eye and sharp intuition that guides her practice.
Reading Time: 5 minutes A couple since they were teenagers, the Templetons have lived in Huntington Beach, California, their whole life. We visit their home studio to learn about how they use the space together, and about their ‘claustrophobic’ relationship
The post In the Studio with Deanna and Ed Templeton appeared first on 1854 Photography.
Reading Time: 3 minutes As a child, Okabe was shy and introverted. Imbued with pain and beauty, her photography illustrates her internal reality: “Perhaps taking photographs is an unconscious healing for my younger self,” she says
The post A vivid journey into Momo Okabe’s psychological landscape appeared first on 1854 Photography.
Reading Time: 3 minutes “For me, the whole process was like putting a stick into an anthill and confronting my family trauma,” the Polish photographer says.
The post Fun and games: Dominik Wojciechowski’s The Castle uses visual humour to make sense of home life appeared first on 1854 Photography.
Reading Time: 4 minutes Throughout history, the nude has transitioned from a figure of anatomical intrigue to a token of beauty, and even a political tool. From Weston to Mapplethorpe and into the present day, Joseph Glover unravels the then and now of the photographic nude
The post Shaping the Body: How have photographic nudes challenged perceptions of the human body? appeared first on 1854 Photography.
Reading Time: 4 minutes The Italian photographer travelled to the village of Cotignola in 2018, seeking inspiration and a new beginning.
The post Marco Zanella finds love in the Italian countryside appeared first on 1854 Photography.
Reading Time: 4 minutes Ahead of this year’s international biennale in Melbourne, themed Being Human, we highlight the artists and shows not to be missed
The post Australian photographers to look out for at PHOTO 2022 appeared first on 1854 Photography.
Reading Time: 2 minutes Featuring work by artists including Cindy Sherman, David Bailey, Robert Frank and Irving Penn, The Photographers’ Gallery’s exhibition digs deep into the treasures of Antoine de Beaupré’s 15,000-strong record collection
The post Featuring 200 iconic record sleeves, TPG’s latest exhibition illustrates the enduring importance of album art appeared first on 1854 Photography.
Where the interior of anything of consequence meets its exterior lies a point of tension that is best understood by an examination of limits. In terms of social experience and urban dwelling, this is no different. Designs in 20th and 21st-century forms of living have made the urban experience a questionable experiment much to […]
One of the enduring traits found in the photography of Luigi Ghirri is the way in which the artist played with the camera and the optical alignment of photographic images. His quest for optical games, shooting from behind the corner or through the veil as it were created a dialogue in photography that at […]
Christine Gössler exists in my mind, or rather the photographs of her, as the eternal notion of elegy in the photographic medium. Whereas she does not haunt my own memories, I feel the burden and the weight of her portraits through the images shot and books made by her husband Seiichi Furuya. When I suggest […]
Photography has a long history of documenting performances and rituals. The two terms, though separate are inexorably linked when they cross the path of divinity in all of its forms, invocations, and variations. From Christianity to the most abject forms of its antithesis, photography has always been instrumental in the documentation of rituals, the […]
Are we defined by our periods between tragedy or by the politics of the tragedy itself? During the course of the 21st Century, our lives feel constantly intertwined and defined by a sense of paralysis regarding global events. We are a media-manipulated species whose ability to read the political terrain is constantly undermined by […]
Perhaps it is because we live in a time where our affinity towards our natural environment has faced a grave and perilous threat that we are beginning to look inward towards the world around us, particularly to the natural world and the affirming images that it conjures on a micro-level. After centuries of technological […]
Were all just passengers here, some of us just feel the need to document our experiences to convey, reflexively back to ourselves, that we were ever really present. We rely on the camera as a means for which to confirm our existence and our incremental movements here under the increasingly hot sun. The camera […]
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. The curator, Sandra KrižićBoban moves the focus from the domestic art scene to the neighboring scene, the Slovenian scene, creating a collaboration with Gallery Fotografija…
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 show individual persons, or several of them set in the same environment. It is clear that each person is aware that he / she is…
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 it finally led her to the later series of Operas and Plays. I am trying to be as commonplace as I can be, she used to…
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 real. The significance of the media-projected reality uncovers itself through strengthening the awareness of necessity to transcend the realistic ideology frame. It is exactly this…
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 on in an attempt to define our own existence? Are we looking for an explanation? For reasons? Justification? Or are we simply denying our own…
Davor takes interest in the fringe fields of light. What does he find in them? Fringe frequencies? But there is no such a thing, cause frequencies always move on, metamorphosing from visible to invisible, from light to sound and, further down to the oscillations that make up the universe. The given possibilities of our perceptions…