In Singh’s first major survey, on show in Berlin, the movement and physicality of the photographer’s creative process manifests in her free-flowing images and the many forms she employs to create and show them
In Singh’s first major survey, on show in Berlin, the movement and physicality of the photographer’s creative process manifests in her free-flowing images and the many forms she employs to create and show them
Reflections on absence, agency, and change weave through Winship’s quiet, observational images
The show highlights the well-known and overlooked artists who captured the mood of the era
Consumerism and imperialism have long been explored and visualised in photography. Indeed, images themselves are a commodity that perpetuate the cycle. But with the dawn of the internet and new technologies, the heightened awareness of the climate crisis, intersectional thought and need for decolonisation, photography’s relationship to capitalism is being reexamined.
To come out was to risk one’s job, children, and safety. For these communities, “the party was the victory”
Hannah Wilke: Art for Life’s Sake, at the Pulitzer Arts Foundation, Missouri, until 16 January 2022, is the artist’s first career-spanning retrospective in over a decade
Andy Sewell’s photobook Known and Strange Things Pass reminds us how deeply enmeshed contemporary life and the digital world are
The New Woman Behind the Camera. Presenting the overlooked contributions of over 120 female photographers from 20 different countries