Reading Time: 3 minutes This month we visit Garry Fabian Miller at the end of an era — as he works his way through his last 100 sheets of Cibachrome.

Reading Time: 3 minutes This month we visit Garry Fabian Miller at the end of an era — as he works his way through his last 100 sheets of Cibachrome.
Reading Time: 3 minutes As the UK lurches towards a possible extension of the Brexit deadline, British Journal of Photography’s annual Portrait Issue returns with a selection of images from this year’s Portrait of Britain award
Reading Time: 3 minutes Our September issue features an exclusive interview with Tim Walker, as well as Libuše Jarcovjáková’s documentation of the Prague underground, our pick of this year’s British graduates, and much more.
Reading Time: 2 minutes Our August issue is dedicated to journeys, exploring photographic odysseys from across four continents
Reading Time: 3 minutes Our July issue features Jack Davison, Aaron Schumann, Maisie Cousins, and Henry Wessel, among many others who remind us of why photographers do what they do
Reading Time: 4 minutes For our annual talent issue, we introduce this year’s Ones To Watch: 19 emerging photographers drawn from 750 nominations made by our global network of experts
Reading Time: 3 minutes George Georgiou, Jonathan Torgovnik, Nadine Stijns and Cansu Yildiran all feature in our community issue, which focuses on the ideas and strategies behind four contrasting approaches employed by outsiders looking in
Reading Time: 3 minutes From the bustling cities in the work of Eamonn Doyle and Guy Tillim, to Mark Power’s survey of decaying American landscapes, and a collaboration between Clémentine Schneidermann, Charlotte James, and a group of children in South Wales – this month’s issue is dedicated to the idea of the street as a site of theatre and historical spectacle.
Reading Time: 3 minutes This month, we present a small selection of work that will be shown at Format festival, which returns to the Quad Arts Centre in Derby, England for its ninth edition this March. Under the theme Forever/Now, our edit of notable projects emphasises the festival’s slant towards ‘crooked’ documentary practices, where a lack of subject or search for the unknown is filled by fiction and interpretation.