Buck Ellison’s first monograph delves into the visual ambiguity afforded by a wealthy class of people
Politics & Power
Under Donald Trump’s administration, the future of wildlife conservation appeared bleak, but what might it look like now Biden is in power? Graeme Green speaks to three wildlife photographers about what the new President-elect should prioritise
In critique of Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, artist Elsa Leydier corrupted and inverted the stereotypical image of Brazil to expose the realities of a compromised democracy
An unexpected call launched JR into his latest project, set in a Californian maximum-security prison
Working with inmates and guards, the French photographer’s gargantuan mural made in Tehachapi prison is the centrepiece of his first UK retrospective, opening at the Saatchi next month
The Land of Holes exposes environmental exploitation and injustice quietly ravaging an the community of Brescia.
An encyclopedia entry led Cemre Yeşil Gönenli to a series of photographs of prisoners, commissioned by the 34th sultan of the Ottoman Empire. Her latest book appropriates these images, questioning the power of authority
Bourouissa is the winner of this year’s Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation prize. Here, we revisit an interview about his retrospective, which presented 15 years of documenting life on the margins
Guided by the surrealist writings of Aimé Césaire, Halpern attempts to create a visual ode to the Caribbean archipelago, compelled by the dissonance between its natural beauty and terrible history, and struggling with his position as a white outsider
Blending portraits with defunct bolívar banknotes, Felipe Jácome captures the exhaustion of Venezuelan migrants and the broken country from which they flee