From Koos Breukel and Roy Villevoye’s Tí, currently on view at FOAM in Amsterdam. No one in the Indonesian village of Tí had ever had their portrait taken before this project. See more here.
Image: © Koos Breukel
We spoke with author, NYU professor and digital image manipulation authority Fred Ritchin on the controversy surrounding Paul Hansen’s World Press Photo award-winning photograph. Read the full interview here.
Great new feature today, from the May/June issue:
We spoke with some of today’s top female photojournalists about their unique experiences and access in conflict zones.
Photo: © Heidi Levine/Sipapress
Snorri Sturluson makes a rigorous study of the ubiquitous New York laundry, each an “oasis of despair”
Image © Snorri Sturluson
This is the cover of Nobuyoshi Araki’s photobook Okinawa, one of his earliest works. I’ve had the chance to see it in person a couple of times and it’s excellent—I would buy it if it didn’t cost literally thousands of dollars on the open market. Enter Shashasha, an app that’s making it possible to look at some of the most legendary Japanese photobooks on your iPad, for just a dollar a book.
From our Photojournalism of the Week round-up:
“Rubber Duck by Dutch conceptual artist Florentijn Hofman, is seen deflated in Hong Kong’s Victory Harbor. The giant inflatable duck first appeared in Hong Kong about two week ago. Siu Chiu is a Reuters photographer based in Hong Kong.”
Photo: Siu Chiu/Reuters
Oh, hello.
Asger Carlsen’s Hester is a gruesomely fleshy, heavily abstracted take on the sculptural female nude.
Image: © Asger Carlsen
We took a look at the controversy surrounding whether or not Paul Hansen’s World Press Photo winning shot was digitally manipulated. HDR rears its head!
Photo: © Paul Hansen
From our Photojournalism of the Week gallery:
“Rick Scott of security contractor Camber Corp impersonates a hostile shooter during a training exercise at Quantico Middle High School in Quantico, Virginia. James Lawler Duggan is an extremely accomplished American photojournalist based in Washington DC. “
Photo: James Lawler Duggan/Reuters
© Mustafah Abdulaziz, from his series on water in Sierra Leone, “Water Is Gold”
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