Ken Schles started this project when both of his parents were suffering from Alzheimer’s disease, their memories fading, and his wife was gravely ill. He turned to photography, which fails in…
Author Laurence Cornet
May 30th marks the first anniversary of the Gezi Park protests, that enflamed Istanbul and the rest of Turkey last spring. This is for us the occasion to talk about a…
While Phaidon recently published a reverse retrospective of Danny Lyon that looks back at the photojournalist’s career beginning with his most recent series, Aperture and Xavier Barral are publishing a new edition…
Disco Night Sept 11 is a magnificent hybrid work. Part war story and part family album, it shares with the latter the fabric cover, relatively small photographs, unfolding pages, captions, and…
The Jackson Fine Art Gallery in Atlanta is presenting a selection of photographs by Frederick Sommer, taken from the collection of a passionate admirer who built up his collection from 1973…
At a time when discussions of photojournalism focus more than ever on form, the Kati Horna exhibition at the Jeu de Paume arrives to broaden the debate. Horna (née Deutsch), who quickly became one…
Blink is the visionary—and yet, now that it exists, obvious—idea of Julien Jourdes and Matt Craig, former photo editors at the Wall Street Journal. It brings together media professionals of…
“A Gallery for Fine Photography,” reads a wooden sign at 214 Chartres Street in New Orleans’ French Quarter, a short walk from The Marigny. The gallery is usually closed on…
When I saw Bruce Davidson three months ago, he told me with a mixture of amusement and worry that the night before, a water leak had damaged a set of negatives he…
Malcolm Daniel, you have been appointed head of the photography department at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. You started your career at the Metropolitan Museum with Maria Morris Hambourg,…