The annual Bonfire celebrations are captured in dark monochrome, as they link to the greater narrative of British existence
The annual Bonfire celebrations are captured in dark monochrome, as they link to the greater narrative of British existence
Near Salvador, the capital of Bahia state, an island community of Afro-Brazilians are living life in toxic waters
The American photographer’s new book, The Forgotten, trials a complex hierarchy of power between the sheltered, the remembered, and the forgotten
“Art in itself doesn’t change anything. But when it’s aligned to a political movement, it becomes its visual arm.”
Hannah Wilke: Art for Life’s Sake, at the Pulitzer Arts Foundation, Missouri, until 16 January 2022, is the artist’s first career-spanning retrospective in over a decade
The photographer’s new book, Sin Salida, candidly portrays the devastating reality of Salvadorans who lead lives of fear and daily intimidation
The work condemns the abusive kafala system in Lebanon, where women from Sierra Leone are recruited through a human trafficking network
Featuring Black Panthers, Fidel Castro, and feminist protest, a new monograph compiles her images of the radical
In A Gadda Da England freely mixes time and place, finding connections between events and protests through the years