With a national lockdown, Gray found ways to create new work while championing the local essential workers keeping the country connected

With a national lockdown, Gray found ways to create new work while championing the local essential workers keeping the country connected
The fifth installment of an ongoing collaboration between Open Doors Gallery and Setanta Books, in their latest zine, Kužnik travels America in search of its timeless iconography
Todd R. Darling returns to his home in New Jersey, documenting the town of Paterson in his latest photobook
A new generation of contemporary photographers are challenging the status quo, drawing on their personal histories to make work that is inherently relevant for the future.
On the day of US President-Elect Joe Biden’s inauguration, the Mexican photographer reflects on her Female in Focus 2020 winning series, conceived last year in a bid to convince American citizens to vote Trump out of office
Paul Martin’s series of portraits aims to give people experiencing homelessness the dignity and compassion they deserve
In the arid desert planes of the desert, many artists and travellers have made a home out of a seemingly inhospitable landscape
After following Inuit hunters and their dogs for four decades, Ragnar Axelsson is ready to share work charting what could be the end of a 4000-year long tradition
The home has inspired myriad artists. Be it documenting their family, themselves, their surroundings or something more abstract, photographers have revealed some of the most intimate elements of their personal lives against this backdrop.
“The ache for home lives in all of us, the safe place where we can go as we are and not be questioned,” Maya Angelou wrote in her book, All God’s Children Need Travelling Shoes. For many artists, the search for home is ongoing.
For others, the space is synonymous with togetherness and identity. “Perhaps home is not a place but simply an irrevocable condition,” wrote James Baldwin. Like Baldwin, many live in exile, away from their family, country and safety. Over the lockdown of the Covid-19 pandemic, the idea of home took on a new meaning – at once a place of protection, and confinement and isolation. But no matter who, where or what home is to you, there is no place like it.