To Have and Have Not : Nooderlicht Photo Festival How were the 1 percent, the rich and powerful, affected by the GFC? This is the core theme for the 20th…
Author Alison Stieven Taylor
In this new book by former National Geographic photographer Nathan Benn, images that were considered pedestrian at the time they were shot, now take on historical significance as they capture…
It has been a big year for Paris-based, New Zealand photojournalist Robin Hammond. In February he won the 2013 FotoEvidence Book of the Year Award for his long-term photo essay…
Edward Steichen was the primary photographer for Vanity Fair and Vogue in the 1920s and 1930s. Already recognised for his distinctive style and his use of light in his portraiture…
During his lifetime Australian photographer John Cato kept out of the limelight and abhorred celebrity. Cato died in 2011, after a long battle with emphysema, and the extent of his…
For nearly 20 years Australian photojournalist Ben Bohane has documented the remote peoples of Melanesia. In his new book, The Black Islands – Spirit and War in Melanesia, Bohane explores…
In 1965 photojournalist Tim Page was with the Australian troops in Vietnam when they landed in Bien Hoa. Like many of those he photographed, Page was barely out of his…
Australian photographer Rennie Ellis was an irreverent spirit, naturaly appealing who armed with a camera captured one of the most dynamic periods of Australian contemporary culture. A self-styled street photographer,…
Photographer Murray Fredericks’ unique visual language transforms remote or hostile natural environments into ethereal vistas that appear to be from worlds beyond our own. In his latest collection Topophilia Fredericks…
In a career that spanned more than 40 years American photographer Ormond Gigli shot thousands of images and was widely published in magazines such as Life, Paris Match, Collier’s, The…