2023-09-06 2023-09-11
Lens Culture

Selling Polaroids in the Bars of Amsterdam, 1980

Originally taken as cheap snapshots sold to late-night revelers in Amsterdam, this couple’s collection of Polaroid portraits have become an invaluable archive of the city’s nightlife from when the 70s turned into the 80s.

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Lens Culture

Dreaming on the Hudson

Questioning preconceived notions of masculinity and Asian American identity against the backdrop of the Hudson River Valley, Andrew Kung weaves a new American pastoral in images that capture tender moments of youth.

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Lens Culture

South of the River

Doused in bright sunlight, friends and strangers are immortalized in front of Nico Froehlich’s lens, coming together to form “South of the River” — a fond portrait of the area of London where he grew up.

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Lens Culture

Image Cities

Traversing 17 of the world’s most influential cities, Anastasia Samoylova’s latest body of work is a multi-layered exploration of the photographs that invade and occupy public space—and the many ways they infiltrate and shape our lives and desires.

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Lens Culture

Why I Make Art

Mari Katayama reflects on the roots of her intricately staged self-portraits, in which she uses her own body—often surrounded by objects and environments she has created herself—as a lens through which to reflect society.

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Lens Culture

Gilded Lilies

Norwegian photographer Tine Poppe’s portraits of cut flowers, shot against landscapes ravaged by climate change, propose a new take on the still life—one fit for the uncertain times we are living in.

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Lens Culture

Another America — AI-Generated Photos from the 1940s and 50s

Phil Toledano has often pushed the boundaries of photography to imagine the future; now he’s tapping into AI to create alternative histories, challenging our belief in any images at all.

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Lens Culture

Articles of Virtu

Prized old automobiles—that most American of obsessions—are the entry point to the surprising beauty and tenderness of their owners, the communities they belong to, and the aspirations they hold dear.

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British Journal of Photography
Letha Wilson on using concrete, metal and other materials to expand photography beyond the frame

Letha Wilson on using concrete, metal and other materials to expand photography beyond the frame

Photography’s rules are made to be broken. Having become frustrated with the medium’s conventions, five artists discuss how sculpture, activism and X-rays keep photography alive in their work. Next up: Letha Wilson
The post Letha Wilson on using concrete, metal and other materials to expand photography beyond the frame appeared first on 1854 Photography.

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British Journal of Photography
Bodies of work: Alix Marie talks myth and muscle

Bodies of work: Alix Marie talks myth and muscle

Photography’s rules are made to be broken. Having become frustrated with the medium’s conventions, five artists discuss how sculpture, activism and X-rays keep photography alive in their work. Next up: Alix Marie
The post Bodies of work: Alix Marie talks myth and muscle appeared first on 1854 Photography.

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British Journal of Photography
Read new fiction inspired by Enda Bowe’s ‘Hannah’

Read new fiction inspired by Enda Bowe’s ‘Hannah’

Award-winning novelist and playwright Lucy Caldwell worked with Bowe on this new story being presented in his show at Dublin’s Royal Hibernian Academy.
The post Read new fiction inspired by Enda Bowe’s ‘Hannah’ appeared first on 1854 Photography.

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British Journal of Photography
How to build a career (part 2): Campbell Addy, Rhiannon Adam, Sinna Nasseri and Charlie Engman

How to build a career (part 2): Campbell Addy, Rhiannon Adam, Sinna Nasseri and Charlie Engman

In the second instalment of Gem Fletcher’s industry interviews, we hear from four more artists on navigating agencies, hours, and side hustles
The post How to build a career (part 2): Campbell Addy, Rhiannon Adam, Sinna Nasseri and Charlie Engman appeared first on 1854 Photography.

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British Journal of Photography
Maya Rochat on painting, perception, and ‘stretching photography’s motives’

Maya Rochat on painting, perception, and ‘stretching photography’s motives’

Photography’s rules are made to be broken. Having become frustrated with the medium’s conventions, five artists discuss how sculpture, activism and X-rays keep photography alive in their work. First up is Maya Rochat
The post Maya Rochat on painting, perception, and ‘stretching photography’s motives’ appeared first on 1854 Photography.

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British Journal of Photography
How photo collages retell the history of Black Panama

How photo collages retell the history of Black Panama

For Giana De Dier, archives are the answer to her nation’s complex cultural history – and to spotlighting the forgotten figures from the canal-building era
The post How photo collages retell the history of Black Panama appeared first on 1854 Photography.

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British Journal of Photography
Nick Hedges on Shelter, Camerawork, and photo democracy

Nick Hedges on Shelter, Camerawork, and photo democracy

His photographs of Birmingham’s late-1960s housing crisis transformed how the urban poor were visualised in the UK. We catch up with the veteran documentarian
The post Nick Hedges on Shelter, Camerawork, and photo democracy appeared first on 1854 Photography.

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British Journal of Photography
A guide to Singapore’s photography scene

A guide to Singapore’s photography scene

Famed for its skyscrapers, the densely packed city-state is also home to a burgeoning photo scene. Photographer and lifelong resident Calvin Chow guides us through the cultural highlights
The post A guide to Singapore’s photography scene appeared first on 1854 Photography.

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Magnum Photos

Magnum Welcomes Four New Members

The post Magnum Welcomes Four New Members appeared first on Magnum Photos.

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Magnum Photos

100 Photos for Press Freedom by Abbas

The post 100 Photos for Press Freedom by Abbas appeared first on Magnum Photos.

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Magnum Photos

Burning Beauty

The post Burning Beauty appeared first on Magnum Photos.

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Magnum Photos

A Year in Ukraine

The post A Year in Ukraine appeared first on Magnum Photos.

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Magnum Photos

Magnum Digest #185: News and Projects from January 2023

The post Magnum Digest #185: News and Projects from January 2023 appeared first on Magnum Photos.

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Magnum Photos

Lindokuhle Sobekwa named inaugural Kobal Fellow

The post Lindokuhle Sobekwa named inaugural Kobal Fellow appeared first on Magnum Photos.

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Magnum Photos

“The Era of Plenty is Over.” Matt Black on water inequality in the US

The post “The Era of Plenty is Over.” Matt Black on water inequality in the US appeared first on Magnum Photos.

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Magnum Photos

Last Minute Gift Ideas from Magnum

The post Last Minute Gift Ideas from Magnum appeared first on Magnum Photos.

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ASBX
Andrea Modica – Theatrum Equorum

Andrea Modica – Theatrum Equorum

Equine surgery and medical observation; specialized labor and industrial production. In its study of the Clinica Equina Bagnarola, a renowned horse clinic outside of Bologna, Italy, Andrea Modica’s Theatrum Equorum (TIS books, 2022) touches on each of these subjects fluidly and with considerable grace, in a mode closer to aphorism than to essay. Modica’s images […]

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ASBX
Igor Posner – Cargó

Igor Posner – Cargó

The first time I looked through Igor Posner’s Cargó (Red Hook Editions, 2022) I was bewildered. I did not know, for example, that across 160 pages and what feels like triple that number of images, it would express the disjointedness and poignancy of memory, or that it would render the experience of time passing as […]

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ASBX
Julie van der Vaart Blind Spot

Julie van der Vaart Blind Spot

Full Article on Patreon Julie van der Vaart‘s Blind Spot (VOID, 2022) aims to reconcile the body with geological formations that illustrate the schism between the notion of time and its readability by the mind and body of humankind. A long-term project, the book is a thick volume of van der Vaart’s photographs veiled in […]

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ASBX
Valerio Polici Interno

Valerio Polici Interno

Full Article on Patreon   …The book is well-sequenced and edited by the Studiofagnel team, with passages of images coordinated by gold and brown to off-white images of textiles and walls. A labyrinthian element asks the viewer to navigate through the corridors of Polici’s world akin to reading Borges. Nothing is inevitable, but the viewer’s […]

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ASBX
Coca-Cola and the Implied Apathy of Tomatsu Shomei’s Photographs

Coca-Cola and the Implied Apathy of Tomatsu Shomei’s Photographs

Full Article with More Images on Patreon   It is essential to understand the biography of Tomatsu to understand what the emotion of rage or anger may be prevalent in his work. As a pubescent teen during the atomic bombing of Japan and the subsequent end of the Second World War, Tomatsu recalls the occupation […]

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ASBX
Preliminary Analysis of Nakahira Takuma For a Language to Come (Kitarubeki Kotoba no Tameni)

Preliminary Analysis of Nakahira Takuma For a Language to Come (Kitarubeki Kotoba no Tameni)

Full Article on Patreon   Preliminary Analysis of Nakahira Takuma For a Language to Come (Kitarubeki Kotoba no Tameni)     There are several things that I love about Nakahira’s book. The idea that he does not make formal considerations such as vertical vs. horizontal page layout a huge deal. He switched to verticality with […]

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ASBX
Erik Mowinckel THE SUN SETS INSIDE YOU

Erik Mowinckel THE SUN SETS INSIDE YOU

Full Article on Patreon     I am curious as to what lies between the notion of glancing versus that of observation. Can an observation be reduced to a glance? Can a more prolonged glance become an observation, and what do these questions pose to how we make photographs and how do we view them […]

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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. 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…

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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 show individual persons, or several of them set in the same environment. It is clear that each person is aware that he / she is…

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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 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…

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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 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…

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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 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…

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Suvremena hrvatska fotografija
Davor Sanvincenti’s Fringe Oscillations

Davor Sanvincenti’s Fringe Oscillations

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…

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