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Archives
volume 22 (9.2009-10.2009) |
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Covered
British photographer Peter Ainsworth has photographed carefully wrapped plants in a winter garden, as if they were works of sculpture.
Enchanted Spaces
Interiors of private dwellings from all over the world are captured with beautiful natural light, just as they are, by photographer Maarigje de Maar.
In Whose Name?
"Does one form of religious intolerance lead to another?" Abbas traveled to 16 countries to try to sort out this thorny question.
We English
Simon Roberts travelled far and wide throughout his native England to capture contemporary photographs of his fellow countrymen and fabled landscapes. The results are poetic, stunningly beautiful, and sometimes quite humorous.
Home Work
Part artist, part sociologist, Tessa Bunney explores domestic labor in and around Hanoi, Vietnam.
Noorderlicht 2009
Five guest curators each present a unique response to the topic of Conflict this year at the Noorderlicht Photofestival in the Netherlands.
Not Natasha
Dana Popa reports from the Republic of Moldova, the poorest country in Europe, and the main exporter of sex slaves for the whole continent.
Fotografías Mínimas
Argentine photographer Leandro Piñeiro has been making street photography in downtown Buenos Aires since 2002. Kate Stanworth reviews his new photobook.
Lost Istanbul:
1950s and 60s
A retrospective of Magnum photographer Ara Güler's photographs from his native Turkey show Istanbul as a bustling, thriving, romantic city in the mid-20th century.
Photobook: Georgian Spring
In the form of a travel journal, 10 Magnum photographers provide a multi-perspective view of contemporary life in this former Soviet country.
Vessels and Interiors
Korean photographer Bohnchang Koo creates wonderfully quiet, elegant photographs of rare Korean white porcelain ceramics, in two related series.
Photoquai 2009, the 2nd biennial photo festival of world images in Paris, is
focusing on the themes of politics, society and poetry, and featuring the work of 50 contemporary photographers. See 60 preview photos here.
Christian Houge guides us into a mystery between the ritualized shapes of the traditional and withdrawn Zen garden in Kyoto and the equally ritualized spaces of futuristic, urban Tokyo.
Reinaldo Loureiro has documented the world's largest concentration of high-tech plastic greenhouse farms on the coast of Spain, as well as the illegal immigrants who provide the cheap labor there to feed most of Europe.
UK photographer Edmund Clark shows what remains of the US detainment center at Guantanamo Bay, and he also photographs the homes to which some of the former detainees have returned.
American photographer Karen Glaser has spent lots of time in, around, and under the waters of lush, exotic areas of the Everglades in Florida, translating her visceral experiences into stunning works of natural beauty.
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Archives
volume 21 (6.2009-8.2009) |
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David Lynch
Film-maker David Lynch made 50 odd photographs in a collaboration with Danger Mouse.
Boarding
House
The latest book from South African photographer Roger Ballen is both beautiful and disturbing. In an exclusive audio interview, Ballen talks about this new work.
Everyone My Brother Knows in Girdwood, Alaska
Laura Domela captures affectionate hyper-real portraits
of the characters who live in her brother's small home town in Alaska.
Arles Photo Festival Preview
See more than 90 preview photos from the largest photo festival in Europe— now in its 40th year.
Karambolage/
Smash-up
Arnold Odermatt was a police photograper in a small Swiss canton for more than 40 years. He often took two sets of photographs at the scenes of accidents: one standard shot for the police, and more artful photographs for his own collection.
Zidlicky
Retrospective
A new, beautifully printed book celebrates a 30-year retrospective of the dream-like artwork of Czech photographer Vladimir Zidlicky.
Women
at Work
Young Finnish photographer Joel Gräfnings is working on a series of photographs focusing on women who work in male-dominated environments.
Domésticas
Slovakian documentary photographer Andrej Balco explores
the oddly entwined relationships between masters and servants in wealthy
middle-class Brazil.
American photographer Laurie Lambrecht spent three years taking pictures in the studio of Pop artist Roy Lichtenstein. Her photographs offer us a rare and intimate look into the creative working processes of one of the 20th Century's most prominent artists.
A new book features extraordinary glass-negative portraits from the recently rediscovered archive of little-known Polish photographer Stefania Gurdowa, who died in 1968. Her unnamed, unknown subjects of all ages look out at us like living history.
Polish photographer Andrzej Kramarz spent two-and-a-half years making pictures of eclectic collections and bizarre jumbles of objects he discovered at flea markets in Krakow.
Images of a disappearing culture: Polish photographer Adam Panczuk is documenting the transformation of Polish village life. This series offers some beautiful images of folk-theatre performers.
Carlo Gianferro won a first prize at the World Press Photo Awards for his portraits of wealthy Roma families at home in their new opulent interiors.
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Archives
volume 20 (4.2009-5.2009) |
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Obama's People: interview with Nadav Kander
Working for "The New York Times", London-based photographer
Nadav Kander was given unprecedented access to make
portraits of 52 new incoming members of Obama's administration just
weeks before they moved into the White House. Kander spoke with Lens
Culture in an exclusive audio interview about this fun but daunting
task.
Suburban Slovakia
This photo essay by Andrej Balco is an intimate view into the lives of people in old prefab apartment blocks in Slovakia.
Eleventh Finger
Paris-based artist Yuki Onodera combines quirky hand-cut paper masks with surreptitious photographs of strangers in city streets.
The Quiets
Visual haiku from Timo Kelaranta of the Helsinki School.
Hong Kong Reminiscence
1958
Japanese photographer Shigeichi Nagano just released a new book of photos taken 50 years ago. Marc Feustel writes a glowing review.
Spring-Summer 2008
Illegal street vendors in Tuscany are photographed hiding behind the counterfeit fashion items that the tourists love to buy at bargain prices. Photographs by Gianmaria Gava.
Recent Work by Ralph Gibson
An exhibition in Paris features nudes and other artful black-and-whites by American master Ralph Gibson.
Strangely Familiar
Photographs by Michal Chelbin. This book, published by Aperture in 2008, reveals a disquieting view of daily life for people in various small traveling performing groups.
French photographer Scarlett Coten has
spent a couple years living and photographing throughout Egypt. Her series of diptychs reverberate with intimate life and luscious color. A personal poetic essay (in French, with an English translation) provides interesting insight into her experiences with these timeless cultures.
South African photographer Guy Tillim creates lush, complex, interweaving photo essays that seem more like nonfiction novels than photojournalism. Listen to a great 18-minute audio interview with the photographer.
African Photographer Malick Sidibé chronicled the exuberant life of the young people in Sudan in the 1950s, 60s and 70s. We have some wonderful photos and a remarkable interview.
Wasif Munem was awarded a special prize by the Prix Pictet last year to document the struggles of people in Bangladesh who have lost practically all of their natural resources and ways of life as a result of short-sighted shrimp farming along the coastline. Text by Francis Hodgson.
Monochrome photographs of everyday landscapes and urban scenes are superimposed with crisply detailed line drawings, colored ink, and magnified wings of flies. Photo-based artwork by Aki Lumi,
text by Linn K.
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Archives
volume 19 (1.2009-3.2009) |
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World Press
Photo Winners
2009
Discover the photos considered to be the best in worldwide photojournalism. Lens Culture features the winners in a high-resolution slideshow.
David LaChapelle Retrospective in Paris
American Pop Photo Artist David LaChapelle makes work that is usually over-the-top. This show highlights some of his best.
Transparent City
Architectural abstraction meets high-tech voyeurism in Michael Wolf's recent photographic study of downtown Chicago. Someone described this work as “Edward Hopper meets Blade Runner."
Love Me, Turkmenistan
Nicholas Righetti’s new photobook takes a serious/playful look at the ubiquitous shrines of propaganda (and other absurdities) erected throughout Turkmenistan to fuel the megalomania of the evil and demented President for Life, Saparmurat Niyazov.
Last Stop: Rockaway Park
A close-knit community of impoverished social outcasts live on an isolated peninsula at the far edge of New York City. Juliana Beasley has befriended many of these people, and has documented the squalor of their lives for the past four years.
Trans Siberian Flipbook
Jeff Vanderpool photographed literally thousands of landscapes and scenes that passed by during one train journey from Moscow to Beijing. Every image was shot from inside the train. Far from being a travelogue, this series explores the intersection of imagination and memory.
Dogs Can't Read
As a personal side-project, Daniel Milnor photographs dogs in the streets of many of the exotic cities where he is sent on assignment. He's created a series of self-published books of dogs (and graffiti) from Palermo, Tijuana, Paris and New York.
Heavy Light
This book, created to accompany the exhibit at ICP, provides a subjective and lively overview of contemporary Japanese lens-based art. The work of 13 artists is presented, along with personal and insightful interviews with each artist.
Little Austria
Residents of quaint summer cottages in Austria agreed to be photographed in their tidy gardens by Italian photographer Gianmaria Gava. What's unique about them is that they are clustered together in a tiny patch of urban oasis in downtown Vienna — a walled-in, fairytale community surrounded by concrete offices and industrial buildings.
Looking at the U.S. 1957-1986
A retrospective of the documentary photography of Fred Baldwin and Wendy Watriss touches on important historic events that still vibrate with relevance today.
Beijing to
St. Petersburg
Dee O'Connell captured moments of surreal dislocation as she traveled on the Trans Siberian Railway in the dead of winter. She savored her trip across seven time zones by taking "lo-fi" photos with her point-and-shoot camera.
Visual Haiku
The small poetic photographs of Masao Yamamoto seem to come from another era, filled with lost memories and nostalgia. In a great interview, the photographer talks about his work and passions.
Beautiful, surreal and disturbing, the artwork of Roger Ballen has attracted vocal criticism — positive and negative — since the early 1990s. In an exclusive audio interview for Lens Culture, Ballen talks at length about his photography. Listen to the interview while looking at 25 recent photographs.
An eclectic exhibition at the Russian Tea Room Gallery in Paris pulls together photographic portraits made by two generations of Russian photographers.
French photographer Eric Tabuchi has created a modern day reprise of Ed Ruscha's ground-breaking artist's book from 1963. Forty-five years later, Tabuchi documents an assortment of odd iconic structures that are now lifeless ruins.
In a brilliant new photobook, French photographer Diane Ducruet has come up with a thought-provoking series of staged portraits that play with the ideas of family dynamics, identity, control, influence, postures of power, and more.
No doubt, this the best photobook to be published in 2008. After working in near obscurity for 30 years, Hiroh Kikai has emerged as a modern-day master portrait maker, patiently documenting eccentric people who pass through an old neighborhood in Tokyo that used to be the city's entertainment district. He's in the same league with Diane Arbus and August Sander. Read the book review, plus a great interview with Kikai by Marc Feustel.
Turkey is experiencing massive, rapid migration from rural communities into brand-new expanses of impersonal housing on the borders of larger cities. George Georgiou has been documenting this change for four-and-a-half years. Here we show work from two ongoing projects.
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