After a boom in web-based photobook consumption, are we seeing a return to a more tactile experience?
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Wolfgang Tillmans has released a number of his exhibition catalogs as free downloads
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Michael Jang's snapshots of his home life from the 1970s are just as comfortable in a family album as on a gallery wall
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An in-depth interview with the Magnum shooter about his early years, how he pays rent these days, and his advice for young photographers
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Miti Ruangkritya’s “Thai Politics” deals with a serious subject in an enjoyable way
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David Benjamin Sherry’s “Wonderful Land” shows familiar landscapes in an unfamiliar way
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This crisp image of a cold Paris day made it big on Tumblr—after a not-so-small modification
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Motoyuki Daifu’s photographs show his family’s house in a state of more or less total disarray
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The Magnum photographer talks about his early days before hitting the big time
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Noah Sheldon's photographs show a Chinese rock festival in full swing
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Portuguese photographer Filipe Casaca offers the inside perspective of an outsider in Dalian, China
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Pittsburgh's finest reflects on surviving as a photographer
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Maurice van Es is a good example of what's currently popular in contemporary photography, but he looks destined to be more than a flash in the pan
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After last year's hit Animals That Saw Me, Ed Panar returns with a more difficult photobook—so difficult, in fact, that you'll literally never be able to finish it
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Taiyo Onorato & Nico Krebs, who produced one of last year's most appealing photobooks, are honored with Foam's Paul Huf Award
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