Oh, hello.
Asger Carlsen’s Hester is a gruesomely fleshy, heavily abstracted take on the sculptural female nude.
Image: © Asger Carlsen
It’s been a tough week. It felt good to end an intense photojournalism roundup with this beautiful, serene moment from South Sudan captured by Andreea Campeanu. Here’s to a better week next week.
Photo: REUTERS/Andreea Campeanu
“When my outlook changed, the images started changing, too.” - Matt Miller, one of our top 10 wedding photographers.
Photo: © Matt Miller/Our Labor of Love
A great portrait series of kids from around the world with their favorite toys, by Gabriele Galimberti.
Photo: Watcharapom - Bangkok, Thailand © Gabriele Galimberti.
Every year we survey the staggeringly huge wedding photography industry to find the 10 pros working at the very top of their game. If you’re looking for the best of the best to shoot your nuptials, look no further.
For his project and book Classroom Portraits, Julian Germain has visited and photographed more than 450 classrooms in over 20 countries. We spoke with him recently about the project (one of our favorite books of 2012). See more here.
Above: Deneside Infants’ School, Seaham, County Durham, UK. Reception and Year 1, Structured Play. October 12th, 2004. © Julian Germain, 2012
Through the lens of Jocelyn Bain Hogg, British aristocracy and British crime families look eerily alike. In his projects A British Entertainment and The Family, Hogg finds truth in leisure at opposite ends of society. In the latest issue of American Photo, Hogg wrote about his experiences shooting both projects. See more here.
Photo: A guest at the Veuve Clicquot Gold Cup Polo Final, Cowdray Park Polo Club, West Sussex, England. From A British Entertainment. © Jocelyn Bain Hogg/VII
Today, David Chancellor’s “Safari Club” takes us inside the incredible trophy rooms of some of Texas’s biggest big-game hunters. See more here.
Image: © David Chancellor/INSTITUTE
Today: A look at four photographers using before-and-after photographs to tell stories of violence.
Image: “BOXER#1” from Nicolai Howalt’s “141 Boxers,” 2001-11.
© Nicolai Howalt, courtesy Martin Asbæk Gallery
Today: A new look at Richard Avedon’s portraits of the powerful, and how he became one of the most important political photographers of our time.
Photo: Rose Mary Woods, secretary to President Richard Nixon. Portrait from The Family (1976). © Richard Avedon
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