Depository of News

Bird Night, and Then

On a journey to India, a photographer meets a young man who is burdened by the strictures of the country’s caste system. A deeply personal look at the limitations (and dangers) of forces beyond our control.

Time to Rest

Winding their way through the Norwegian landscape, truck drivers share the road with other travelers. And yet when they stop to rest, late at night, their deep isolation is revealed.

Great Journeys: Magnum Square Print Sale

Photography is, among so many other things, a journey. See our editors’ selection of 15 iconic images from this latest limited-time offering from the photographers of Magnum (and on this occasion, Aperture as well).

Spontaneity and Obsession: The Motors of Creativity

One of Paris’ great fashion photographers offers his words of wisdom while helping to anoint the next generation of creative image-makers.

Spontaneity and Obsession and the Motors of Creativity

One of Paris’ great fashion photographers offers his words of wisdom while helping to anoint the next generation of creative image-makers.

A Pulitzer-Prize Winner Speaks on the Art of Photojournalism

Award-winning photojournalist Renée C. Byer talks to LensCulture about making an authentic connection with the people she documents and the life-changing relationships formed along the way.

Kai: Following the Cycle of Life

A project begun on the cusp of death (the passing of the artist’s father) and a new beginning (the birth of his daughter) that wanders with poetic grace through life’s ceaseless cycles.

Kai: Following the Cycle of Life

A project begun on the cusp of death (the passing of the artist’s father) and a new beginning (the birth of his daughter) that wanders with poetic grace through life’s ceaseless cycles.

An Urgent Look at How Artificial Intelligence Will See the World

For nearly two centuries, we have thought about photography as an enterprise undertaken by humans, for humans. But what happens when machines start to photograph? What happens when machines start to see?

This Master of Modern Photography Probably Influenced Your Work

We sat down with a curator from the Museum of Fine Arts to discuss the “father” of modern photography and the future of museum collections in our digital world.

How Do Emerging Talents “Emerge”?

The idea of an “emerging talent” is an enticing but nebulous concept. Who are these talents? How are they discovered? How do they emerge? By following the arc of two very different artists, some general principles become clear. 

500 Years of Magic, Mysticism and Ritual in the Forests of Norway

Picked by juror Alec Soth in our Magnum Photography Awards, this series captures the unique culture of the Forest Finns, a people defined by their connection to nature and a set of beliefs rooted in shamanistic tradition.

How Unseen is Taking a Chance on Emerging Artists

While art fairs around the world grow increasingly insular and difficult to penetrate, Amsterdam’s Unseen is dedicating itself to showing fresh faces, new work and creating a platform to examine the next trends in photography.

Photography, Poetry, Music and Philosophy: The Medium from a Critic’s Eye

An independent and invaluable voice in the world of photography, The Guardian’s Sean O’Hagan offers his wide-ranging views on words, images and the increasingly overlooked key to creativity.

Another Way of Telling: Teju Cole’s Blind Spot

Urban non-events; quiet minutiae; delicate juxtapositions—with a literary eye, the celebrated writer turned photo critic turned photographer Teju Cole takes us around the world with his camera and pen, transforming passing moments into gem-like vignettes yo

Without Water

Using a photographic technique generally reserved for scientific documentation—NASA uses it on Mars—this series gives elegiac new life to discarded flowers.

Smoke

Drawn there by chance, a photographer finds himself unexpectedly enraptured by Iceland: the place’s unique topography, desolate landscapes, and constantly shifting array of travelers somehow make the place feel like home.

El Hombrecino: The Little Man

Hear the emotional narrative of a photographer who helped her grandfather track down friends and family missing since the Spanish Civil War.

L’étranger 

Why do some of us feel constantly uprooted, always moving from place to place without settling down? An introspective look at the feeling of self-imposed nomadism and, even, exile.

If It Rained an Ocean

Many people take it for granted that they can “pick themselves up by their bootstraps” and better themselves, but for a large portion of America, that just isn’t true. A look at a working-class community in New Jersey.

Best of October: Deadlines for Competitions, Grants, Fellowships and More

Our editors have put together a curated list of worthwhile (and imminent) opportunities for photographers—have a look and best of luck!

Insights from a New York City Gallery

How do you find a gallery that’s a good fit for your photography? Also: never overlook the importance of how you print your work. Lots of great advice from a Brooklyn gallery’s co-founder and director. 

Are You Ready to Publish a Photobook? 

Nazraeli Press has published work by Alec Soth, Marilyn Minter, Daido Moriyama, and many others. We sat down with Nazraeli’s founder and publisher to learn more about the photobook world.

Slant Rhymes

A poetic and pensive tribute to the new publication from photographers and partners Rebecca Norris Webb and Alex Webb.

Previously on Hans Lucas #20

“Photographs (I mean the good ones) cannot be simply replaced by words—or worse, concepts. The really good ones retain a capacity for resistance, surprise or mystery that constitute their essential charm and force…”

Flower Men

Visit the renowned Malik Ghat Flower Market in Kolkata through a series of portraits that capture the proud vendors posing alongside their spectacular, delicate flora.

Searching for an Authentic Picture of the World’s Most Mysterious Country: North Korea

North Korea is in the headlines daily—but beneath the overheated rhetoric, what is life really like there? A photographer ventured in hoping to pierce the secretive’s country mysterious shroud.

Dinosaur Dust

In the American West, it feels like everywhere has been conquered and exhausted—yet unexplored corners remain. These photographs explore the diverse community of artists, writers, and more “nefarious” characters that live around the edge of Joshua Tree

Infinite Perimeter

Grappling with the pervasive feelings of loss, loneliness, and isolation that overcome everyone—immigrants and natives alike—this series takes the surrounding sea as a grounding force in an otherwise unsteady world. 

Advice for Emerging Photographers: Learning from Nadav Kander

A relentless drive combined with a thoughtfully cultivated humanness—according to the sought-after photographer Nadav Kander, that is what it takes to make your mark in our current age of visual glut. 

CorpoReality

Reflecting on issues of self-control, insecurity, and the contemporary image of a “perfect” body, two projects that capture the lives and stories of people living with disabilities.

Cabinet Cards

Unsettling, disconcerting (and, at times, grotesque), these manipulations of Victorian cabinet cards question the foundation of our identity and the depths at which we judge those around us.

The Desperate Plight of Iranian Fuel Smugglers

Facing economic hardship, a group of largely educated young men smuggle fuel from their country, Iran, into neighboring Pakistan—a high risk endeavor that tempts with its lucrative rewards.

The Desperate Plight of Iranian Fuel Smugglers

Facing economic hardship, a group of largely educated young men smuggle fuel from their country, Iran, into neighboring Pakistan—a high risk endeavor that tempts with its lucrative rewards.

Our Ever-Changing Identities, Revealed by the Lens

From fashion in the depths of Stasi Germany to the hidden portraits of Taliban fighters, this eclectic exhibition reminds us how the camera’s capacity to reveal our identity lies at the heart of the medium’s fundamental expressive power. 

Welcome to Camp America

A startling new book about human rights atrocities at the U.S. detention center at Guantánamo Bay—and an interview with the photographer who brought these stories to light.

The Hereditary Estate

Created as an antidote to the idealized family pictures gathered by his relatives, a striking series that considers the role of the photo album in defining “the American Dream.”

Yusurika

Though a longtime Tokyo resident, nature continues to call out to this Japanese photographer. Taking inspiration from yusurika, tiny midges, he transforms his surroundings into something fantastical. 

Fault Line

All families have secrets. Shot on the rocky, windy coast of Maine, a series that teeters on the lip of a divide, exploring the hidden imperfections and deep-rooted support inherent in every family.
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