If you are in the region, go see it! This film is a gem. And watch the teaser! [embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a4enOH8kmvg&t=32s[/embed] Produced at the invitation of the Rencontres de la Photographie d’Arles in 1984, Les Années Déclic is the story of a jack-of-all-trades photographer in the middle of his career. Raymond Depardon delves into his archives and memories of the years 1957-1977 to offer, in the form of a cinematographic…
The Eye Photography: World Photography Art History, Latest News and Photography Events
The Eye of Photography is the ultimate digital magazine where everything about photography art is published daily, highlighted, discussed and archived for all professionals and amateurs, in English and French. Its Agenda compiles the most comprehensive selection of photography events in the world (photography exhibitions, art fairs, awards, lectures, workshops…).
Jon Ortner : Visions of Paradise : American Wilderness Jon Ortner lives in the Berkshire Mountains on the border of New York and Massachusetts dividing his time between worldwide journeys of discovery and commercial photography assignments. Jon’s achievements as an artist, scholar, and adventurer are especially reflective of a life committed to passionately exploring the wonders and treasures of the natural world, these are reflected in his most recent international…
The Center for Photography at Woodstock, the photography non-profit CPW celebrated the opening of its renovated headquarters in Kingston, NY, on January 18, 2025. New exhibitions of Mary Ellen Mark, Colleen and Kathleen Kenyon and Keisha Scarville will be on view on view through May 4 at CPW. Housed in a 40,000-square-foot former cigar factory in the city’s arts district, 90 miles north of New York City, the new space…
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The Galerie le Château d’Eau presents the first major exhibition in France of Nicholas Nixon, an emblematic figure of American documentary photography of the last decades. Nicholas Nixon has exhibited at MoMA New York three times, in 1976, 1988 and 2014, in personal presentations. Besides most of the major American museums, his works have been shown in European institutions in Hanover, Berlin, Brussels, Madrid and Barcelona among others. He is…
Archives - October 2012 Only Ernest Bachrach at Radio Keith Orpheum had a career at one studio that rivalled Clarence Bull's tenure at MGM. He joined RKO at its inception in 1929 and stayed until Desilu purchased the studio in 1958. Before coming to RKO, Bachrach worked in New York for Famous Players-Lasky. In the mid 1920s Famous Players-Lasky was consolidated with parent Paramount Pictures and production was moved to…
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Zimbabwean artist Tamary Kudita explores the representation of African identity through photography. Her sophisticated portraits are full of symbolic references, bringing to life a world between reality and imagination through the use of a visual language that borrows from both Africa and the West. Duality is at the heart of Tamary Kudita's identity, as she is descended from the Shona people of Zimbabwe as well as from a white ancestor,…
Haines Gallery presents State Shift, their second solo exhibition with artist Meghann Riepenhoff. Opening in tandem with SF Art Week 2025, this show debuts a poetic, visceral, and personal body of work that expands Riepenhoff’s collaboration with both the cyanotype and the environment. Riepenhoff creates her cyanotypes directly within the landscape, allowing the elements to leave physical inscriptions on paper coated with photographic materials. Marking an important breakthrough in her…
Editorial RM releases the 3rd edition of Small Things In Silence by Masao Yamamoto. Small Things in Silence presents the work of Masao Yamamoto, who brings Japanese traditions into the modern world. Small Things in Silence offers a perspective on twenty years of the Japanese photographer's career. In the words of Yamamoto himself: ‘I try to capture moments that nobody sees and make a photograph of them. When I see…
Joseph Bellows Gallery announced the representation of American photographer Jim Dow. Jim Dow has long been fascinated by the ingenuity and creative spirit found in the built environment. Between 1967 and 1977, his first decade as a young photographer, he drove along old U.S. highways on numerous cross-country road trips, focusing his large format camera on time-worn signage extracted from billboards, diners, gas stations, drive-in theaters, ice cream stands, burger…
The Norton Museum of Art hosts the first solo exhibition by experimental photographer Fabiola Menchelli titled Certain Silence. It is presented as follow. Menchelli's work engages with the materiality of photography, and the works in the exhibition will consider a range of conceptual theories, including visual perception, the relationship between viewer and artwork, the language of abstraction, poetry, and more. Comprising over 20 works, including a selection of previously unseen…
Kristen Joy Emack : Image as a legacy. Kristen Joy Emack is a photographer whose work explores themes of identity, human connection, and the passage of time. Her long-term project, Cousins, offers an intimate portrait of girlhood through the lives of her daughter and nieces. This deeply personal series celebrates the sacred bonds that unite these young girls, capturing the beauty, complexity, and ever-evolving relationships that shape their journey of…
Le goût de la photographie is an original exhibition: you won't find the work of only an artist or a group of photographers, but the photographs of an art collector, Jérôme Prochiantz. Prochiantz, who prefers to describe himself as a collector rather than a hoarder (the term referring to accumulation, a materialistic aspect that he doesn't identify with), has bequeathed a large part of his photographic collection to the BnF.…
Pace presents an exhibition of recent photographs by Richard Misrach at its gallery in New York. On view until March 1, 2025, this is the first presentation devoted to CARGO, a body of work that Misrach began in 2021 during the COVID-19 pandemic. During the last week of the show, advance copies of CARGO (Aperture, May 2025) will be available to view at the gallery. Misrach is known for his…
Sandra Knecht’s exhibition Home is a Foreign Place is on view until April 27, 2025 at the Kulturstiftung Basel H. Geiger | KBH.G foundation. It is announced as follows: Sandra Knecht, a Swiss artist born in 1968 in Zurich and currently living in Buus (BL), has been exploring the concept of “home” for over ten years. For Knecht, it is dynamic and elusive—something that is continually reworked and renegotiated. Her exploration of…
The Ellia Art Gallery presents Contact, a group exhibition bringing together Joachim Romain, Philip Gay, Ella Batts and Maxime Antony. We have chosen to show you the work of the latter with this text that he sent us. Colors brighten our days. Is it the same for our nights? Yes. These colors mix and form dreamlike paintings when we put our minds down and forget the darkness of the night.…
Albert (Al) Normandin worked for Jay Maisel from 1982 to 1985 in the Bank Building at 190 The Bowery, NYC. Jay had his 94th birthday on January 18, 2025. Al Normandin had an idea, he wrote : “I know he is not counting the years anymore and would much rather NOT be reminded. Instead of sending Jay birthday wishes, I thought it would be nice for Jay to hear from…
Combining a 19th century scientific concept with 21st century technique, Cape Cod artist Amy Heller brings her unique brand of manipulated photography to January's Dek Unu Magazine. Her series, Time/Motion Study Multiples, builds on work by late 1800s experimenters Edweard Muybridge and Étienne-Jules Marey, who used multiple and long exposure photography to study time and motion. Heller uses similar stroboscopic photography as the basis for something entirely new. https://www.dekunumag.com/?utm_campaign=Fine+Art+Photography&utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter
Perfect gloomy world Everything begins with a dream... I have always been fascinated by dark atmospheres, those that plunge the environment into one’s so particular that the senses are disturbed, a melancholy that touches me in the depth of my soul. Some elements wrap the places by erasing the details. From this stripped-down style remain the essentials. Led by my feelings, I roam for hours in a chosen loneliness. Only…
Wonderland I used to think it was snow I loved to photograph. But over the years I've come to realize it's snow storms that I truly love, particularly after dark. The more snow forecast, the more excited I get. New York City never seems more magical, no matter how late the hour or how far I walk. All the normal rules and logic of city life are blown aside, and…
Furry Friends This series of animal photographs entitled Furry Friends is by Maxime Godard. Meeting your dogs, cats and horses, he photographs your furry friends with their unique temperaments and brings out the personality of each of his subjects using a process reminiscent of chiaroscuro to highlight their individualities in a canonical aesthetic form.