To coincide with Portrait of Britain 2021, Vadoliya – who was shortlisted for the award last year – discusses Brotherhood: a project musing on the many ways to be a south Asian man in contemporary Britain

To coincide with Portrait of Britain 2021, Vadoliya – who was shortlisted for the award last year – discusses Brotherhood: a project musing on the many ways to be a south Asian man in contemporary Britain
A new exhibition at Bristol Museum & Art Gallery invites three photographers to interrogate the histories we remember and display
“It felt like a poignant opportunity to reflect on the contribution that Black people continue to make to British culture”
Johny Pitts, the recipient of the fellowship, will create a new body of work reflecting on Black Britishness through its myriad manifestations across the UK
In one of the world’s most culturally diverse cities, local and international artists are reclaiming their histories through photographic projects.
After decades of art and activism, the photographer is releasing his first photobook.
As British Vogue’s youngest ever cover photographer, Carter joins a crop of record-breaking Black artists at the forefront of the editorial sphere. She unpacks how she got noticed, her organic approach, and the power of community in driving change
Far from romanticised depictions of the American road, Amani Willet presents an alternative experience, marked by fear, violence and death
“I picked up a camera because it was my choice of weapon against what I hated most about the universe: racism, intolerance and poverty” – Gordon Parks
Since the dawn of the medium, a photographer’s control over their subject – what to show and how to frame it – has rendered photography a partner of colonialism. Authentic experiences of Black and non-white people have been erased in lieu of objectification and fetishisation by the white gaze. But every day, new artists are taking back power.
From Nadine Ijewere’s vibrant celebration of Jamaican heritage to Zanele Muholi’s defiant representations of Black queerness in South Africa, this collection champions radical and nuanced reclamations of space and autonomy, both within the art world and beyond.