|
|
Mitch Epstein's New York Arbor is a quiet, thrilling black and white typology of New York's diverse foliage
|
Michael Jang's snapshots of his home life from the 1970s are just as comfortable in a family album as on a gallery wall
|
Miti Ruangkritya’s “Thai Politics” deals with a serious subject in an enjoyable way
|
|
A young Swedish photographer explores natural phenomena "with the eyes of a scientist"
|
Mauro Altamura photographed baseball games on his black and white TV, isolating players in surprising moments of agility and contortion
|
Through the lens of Jocelyn Bain Hogg, British aristocracy and British crime families look eerily alike
|
|
From generator shows on the corner to Star Trek punk bands, Mark Murrmann's been shooting it all in the Bay Area
|
Sometimes a camera takes pictures. Sometimes it dispenses justice. Ruth Gruber on the shocking photos she made of the Exodus 1947
|
Yukichi Watabe's 2011 photobook was a hit overseas, but it's only just now starting to win recognition in its "native" Japan.
|
A young Japanese photographer re-photographs his prints up to ten times, adding successive layers of handmade distortion each time around
|
In the 1970s, an Englishman traveled to Jamaica with a simple goal: to photograph the leading figures of an unbelievably productive music scene.
|
W. Eugene Smith's extensive personal project documenting the jazz scene of a 1960s New York City loft is only recently getting its due
|