Part gallery, part community space, HOME aims to provide a supportive environment for all

Part gallery, part community space, HOME aims to provide a supportive environment for all
The Japanese photographer searches for beauty in the everyday, a philosophy conversely inspired by tragic disasters.
The latest book by Shanghai-based publishing studio Same Paper, Still Life brings together 13 international photographers exploring their lockdown experience
The photographer’s portrait of a cowboy she met by chance in rural Holland depicts solitude as freedom, for both herself and her subject
French photographer and environmentalist Max Riché travelled to the devastated town of Paradise to find out how the remaining residents attempt to find new life amongst the ruins of California’s largest wildfire
After her award-winning documentary series Ex-Voto, London-based Alys Tomlinson returns with a new work, exploring familiar themes, but with subjects far closer to home
The Japanese photographer’s latest work revisits formative themes, gently reminding us to appreciate the familiar
Our latest issue is dedicated to those we hold most dear, as we speak to photographers who each explore their personal relationships with family
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.