The Brazilian photographer’s shocking images of Kuwait’s devastated oilfields have now been published as a book

The Brazilian photographer’s shocking images of Kuwait’s devastated oilfields have now been published as a book
Curated by Louise Clements, Derby’s FORMAT17 draws on cutting edge photography to consider the man-made world and our place in it
“In the past, no government had the power to keep its citizens under constant surveillance,”…
“I have always been interested in exploring London, I’ve travelled around London and photographed it…
The writer, collector, dealer and curator says so long with an archive of slides and a hammer
A new three-volume collection documents the architectural images of American photographer, Julius Shulman. The tome forms the first major publication of Shulman’s work, detailing buildings by the likes of Frank Lloyd-Wright, Pierre Koenig and Raphael Soriano.
In the late 50’s, New York’s Washington Square was nicknamed junkie row. The late Dave Heath, an orphan and veteran of the Korean war, photographed the people who lurked there. The series has been published for the first time by Stanley/Barker.
In January and February 1991, as the United States–led coalition drove Iraqi forces out of Kuwait, Saddam Hussein’s troops retaliated with an inferno. As the desperate efforts to contain and extinguish the conflagration progressed, Sebastião Salgado traveled to Kuwait to witness the crisis firsthand.
Exploring the creation of Splash and Grab, a London-based photography magazine that aims to give a platform to the best emerging and under-the-radar international photography talent.