We may have only just finished welcoming entries to Portrait of Humanity, but we are…

We may have only just finished welcoming entries to Portrait of Humanity, but we are…
When filmmaker Lee Shulman bought a box of vintage slides from Ebay, he was hoping…
Sarah Waiswa is a Kenya-based documentary and portrait photographer, whose key interests are people and…
Chris Steele-Perkins began The New Londoners four years ago, a project reflecting the individuality, community…
Food Not Bombs is a 30-year-old global movement. Initially based in Massachusetts, US, the grassroots…
Richard Renaldi’s photography career began with a passion for drawing. But, when his high school…
Meet Veronica Sanchis Bencomo, the woman behind Foto Feminas, a platform dedicated to improving the…
As our next evolutionary step following Portrait of Britain, we are pleased to announce a…
“It was before mobile phones, before the internet. It was the initial form of mass communication, a way you could chat to your friends for free. I remember lots of people in Suffolk got a CB radio and thought they were in the Dukes of Hazzard,” says David Titlow, whose latest photobook is a collection of portraits that bring together CB users and their Eyeball cards, their would-be business cards promoting their radio personality.