The Brazilian photographer’s shocking images of Kuwait’s devastated oilfields have now been published as a book
Month: December 2016
‘The Travellers’ unearths the everyday lives of Ireland’s largest minority group.
American photographer William Christenberry, best known for his evocative depictions of the Old South, has died, aged 80, following complications from a years-long battle with Alzheimer’s disease.
“Photography can be a powerful way of telling a story and these photos remind us…
The Swiss artist’s first solo show in London is an immerse installation designed to give each visitor an unique experience
In September of last year, the city of Berlin opened its doors to thousands of refugees from Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq, who had fled their war-torn countries in a desperate search for a new life. Registration centres that were set up to deal with less than half a dozen applicants a month, were overwhelmed by hundreds of families every day. At 10pm, when the centres closed, buses arrived to take the un-registered refugees to emergency accommodation – a gym, or community hall perhaps. Once those were full, the migrants with little more than the clothes on their backs, were left out on the streets until the centre opened its doors again in the morning. It was these images of overcrowding, and these reports of crisis that inundated the news headlines. Less talked about were the stories of the families that took these refugees, strangers from another country who did not speak their language, into their homes. Documentary photographer Aubrey Wade and partner Sarah Bottcher, were two of these volunteers who temporarily hosted a pair of young Afghan men at their new flat.
One of the emerging artists exhibiting in the London College of Communications Photography MA show, Gabriela Mazowiecka’s Letting Go investigates Polish levels of trust