2024-10-07 2024-10-10
Lens Culture

I Did Nothing Other Than Tell Them to Smile

As an only child born under China’s one-child policy, Zihan Wei uses a snapshot aesthetic to explore photography as a language of intimacy and connection to forge a new relationship with her parents.

Read More
Lens Culture

Lumes: Rural Depopulation & Cultural Extinction in Galicia

With a thoughtful gaze born from a deep concern for his surroundings, Adra Pallón explores the devastating consequences of rural depopulation on the culture of Galicia, its environment and the last of its aging inhabitants.

Read More
Lens Culture

Jeff Cowen Provence Works

In this 9-minute video interview, photographer Jeff Cowen talks about making an all-new body of work in the south of France — about 60 of the images are being shown at two venues in Amsterdam right now.

Read More
Lens Culture

Ways of Knowing

Drawing on different mediums to weave together her own visual language, Stephanie Santana’s work builds continuity with the past by exploring the creative process as a way to access generational knowledge.

Read More
Lens Culture

Escaramuza, the Poetics of Home

In her striking collection of portraits, Constance Jaeggi explores Escaramuza—a female-led equestrian performance—and its significance in Mexican-American identity, cementing its place in the monolithic history of the American West.

Read More
Lens Culture

This Earthen Door — Sublime Anthotypes, Preserved Plants & Poetry

Inspired by a herbarium made by American poet Emily Dickinson in the 19th century, this new book reimagines each of the 66 plants in the collection as a sublime anthotype—a cameraless photograph made from organic matter.

Read More
Lens Culture

Summer Fairies — Luminous Fireflies & the Climate Crisis

Over eight years, Koseki has documented the luminous fireflies of Japan, translating their twinkling flight paths into awe-inspiring photographs, and sounding the alarm about the danger to these creatures caused by human intervention and the climate crisis.

Read More
Lens Culture

A Bigger Splash: Soaking Wet New Year Celebrations in Bangkok

This B&W photo essay puts you in the middle of a city-wide playful water fight in the streets of Bangkok during New Year’s celebrations.

Read More
British Journal of Photography
Black family life, memory and ‘purist’ image-making in Kate Sterlin’s Still Life

Black family life, memory and ‘purist’ image-making in Kate Sterlin’s Still Life

The photographer’s new book explores family love, loss, and legacy through the lens of ‘Black storytelling’ and poetic documentary images
The post Black family life, memory and ‘purist’ image-making in Kate Sterlin’s Still Life appeared first on 1854 Photography.

Read More
British Journal of Photography
Hark1karan captures the BMWs of Southall and its Panjabi community

Hark1karan captures the BMWs of Southall and its Panjabi community

Zimmers of Southall is the photographer’s latest photo book interlacing South Asian heritage with West London’s environment
The post Hark1karan captures the BMWs of Southall and its Panjabi community appeared first on 1854 Photography.

Read More
British Journal of Photography
Foto Tallinn showcases a compact but meaningful glimpse of contemporary photography

Foto Tallinn showcases a compact but meaningful glimpse of contemporary photography

The festival contrasts regional Estonian artists with European creatives resonating with a web of social issues, Sarah Moroz reports
The post Foto Tallinn showcases a compact but meaningful glimpse of contemporary photography appeared first on 1854 Photography.

Read More
British Journal of Photography
Imperialism, economics and new talents at Bristol Photo Festival 2024

Imperialism, economics and new talents at Bristol Photo Festival 2024

After its inaugural event was curtailed by the pandemic, Bristol Photo Festival returns with a second edition that is both locally rooted and outward looking
The post Imperialism, economics and new talents at Bristol Photo Festival 2024 appeared first on 1854 Photography.

Read More
British Journal of Photography
Fotohane Darkroom offers children from the Kurdish, Syrian and Iraqi borders a space to express themselves

Fotohane Darkroom offers children from the Kurdish, Syrian and Iraqi borders a space to express themselves

Following on from their last venture, founders Serbest Salih and Amar Kılıç tell BJP about why they use photography with displaced children
The post Fotohane Darkroom offers children from the Kurdish, Syrian and Iraqi borders a space to express themselves appeared first on 1854 Photography.

Read More
British Journal of Photography
Joanne Coates addresses class and age inequality in the northern countryside

Joanne Coates addresses class and age inequality in the northern countryside

A working photographer and farm labourer, Joanne Coates’s latest work asks who can still afford to make rural land their home
The post Joanne Coates addresses class and age inequality in the northern countryside appeared first on 1854 Photography.

Read More
British Journal of Photography
“Being a single mother, a woman photographer and an immigrant was not easy”: Markéta Luskačová’s Children

“Being a single mother, a woman photographer and an immigrant was not easy”: Markéta Luskačová’s Children

Diane Smyth speaks to the Czech photographer about her career between Prague and England and the resistance to being pigeon-holed
The post “Being a single mother, a woman photographer and an immigrant was not easy”: Markéta Luskačová’s Children appeared first on 1854 Photography.

Read More
British Journal of Photography
Announcing the 2024 Paris Photo Carte Blanche Student competition winners

Announcing the 2024 Paris Photo Carte Blanche Student competition winners

BJP reveals the four artists selected to show their work at the Grand Palais in the 2024 Paris Photo Carte Blanche Student competition. Plus the other 16 shortlisted series
The post Announcing the 2024 Paris Photo Carte Blanche Student competition winners appeared first on 1854 Photography.

Read More
Magnum Photos

What is “America?”

The post What is “America?” appeared first on Magnum Photos.

Read More
Magnum Photos

U.S. Focus: Abortion in Florida

The post U.S. Focus: Abortion in Florida appeared first on Magnum Photos.

Read More
Magnum Photos

U.S. Focus: Veterans in North Carolina

The post U.S. Focus: Veterans in North Carolina appeared first on Magnum Photos.

Read More
Magnum Photos

U.S. Focus: Immigration in Arizona

The post U.S. Focus: Immigration in Arizona appeared first on Magnum Photos.

Read More
Magnum Photos

A New Chapter for the Cooperative: An Interview with Cristina de Middel

The post A New Chapter for the Cooperative: An Interview with Cristina de Middel appeared first on Magnum Photos.

Read More
Magnum Photos

U.S. Focus: Democracy in Georgia

The post U.S. Focus: Democracy in Georgia appeared first on Magnum Photos.

Read More
Magnum Photos

PEACE FOR ALL: Cristina de Middel for UNIQLO

The post PEACE FOR ALL: Cristina de Middel for UNIQLO appeared first on Magnum Photos.

Read More
Magnum Photos

PEACE FOR ALL: Lindokuhle Sobekwa for UNIQLO

The post PEACE FOR ALL: Lindokuhle Sobekwa for UNIQLO appeared first on Magnum Photos.

Read More
ASBX
Orianne Ciantar Olive Les Ruines Circulaires

Orianne Ciantar Olive Les Ruines Circulaires

Some photobooks are detailed by their direct exercises in story building. In contrast, others ask that the viewer read them holistically as an environment, a stage in which ideas are distributed, but with fewer absolutes regarding their nature. Hints are dropped, and some images carry the conceptual load of what the press release suggests as […]

Read More
ASBX
Awoiska van der Molen The Humanness of Our Lonely Selves

Awoiska van der Molen The Humanness of Our Lonely Selves

  2024 has been an excellent year for photobooks. I am surprised that after the past few years with fewer titles surfacing into greatness, 2024 has presented so many outstanding titles. It gives me a bit of hope that the medium is picking up again, though I suspect inflation and a general shrinkage of audience […]

Read More
ASBX
Paul Graham – Ambergris Verdigris

Paul Graham – Ambergris Verdigris

  Paul Graham’s new books Ambergris/Verdigris, published this year by MACK, have several parallels worth exploring. First and foremost, it should be said that these titles feel like a return to form. While I am a fan of most of Graham’s bodies of works, the last books have been very inward and family-oriented. There is […]

Read More
ASBX
Interview with Moises Saman

Interview with Moises Saman

Moises Saman is one of the most substantive and accomplished conflict photographers working today. A member of Magnum since 2014, he is best known for photographs he has been making for more than two decades working throughout the Middle East, during which time he covered the Iraq War and the Arab Spring. Many of the […]

Read More
ASBX
Claudine Doury – Solstice

Claudine Doury – Solstice

  As an American living in Europe, I have never gotten my head around the vestigial tail of pagan rituals that still occasionally surface here. They do not happen often, but I am continuously bemused when they do. They seem to function on either fire or water. During the opening season, which includes springtime fertility […]

Read More
ASBX
Chris Killip – Skinningrove 1982-1984

Chris Killip – Skinningrove 1982-1984

Editor’s note: I just got some more background info on the making of the book. So, it turns out this has always been the intended size (as designed in totality by Chris) and that Steidl actually did print it one point, but the estate rejected the printing for it being overly muddy, which is really […]

Read More
ASBX
Melissa Shook – Self-Portraits 1972-1973

Melissa Shook – Self-Portraits 1972-1973

Letting my unconscious, rather than my intellect, dictate the progression was important. For reasons I don’t entirely understand, being nude became part of the project early on. And working against that white wall near the two front windows in the so-called living room became a central point. —Melissa Shook I might’ve mistakenly read Sally Stein’s […]

Read More
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…

Read More
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…

Read More
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…

Read More
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…

Read More
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…

Read More
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…

Read More