2014 marks the 45th anniversary of Woodstock. Baron Wolman was Rolling Stone magazine’s first photographer. In 1969 he attended what would become the most famous music festival of all time.…
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“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…
Takehito Miyatake’s work explores the interplay between what he describes as the “light of Japan” and the natural landscape, and the connection between land, water and sky. His noted series…
Roger Ballen’s newest monograph, Asylum of the Birds (Thames & Hudson) is a revelation, a vision of the inside of the mind in black and white—and all shades in between. There is…
I was taken by an unexpected passion for photography three years ago, my interest grew for architecture; that created by Man, the other drawn through lines and light. Living in…
Paolo Verzone’s passion for the European identity motivated his major works - Seeeuropeans – an extended series of portraits shot on different European beaches between 2009 and 2013. Then Paolo…
The first major U.S. solo exhibition of noted Brazilian photographer Caio Reisewitz is currently on view at the International Center of Photography. During the past two decades, Reisewitz has produced a…
Urbes Mutantes: Latin American Photography 1944–2013 at the International Center for Photography is a major survey of photographic movements in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Mexico, Peru, and Venezuela. Urbes Mutantes…
Seules is a series of self-portraits depicting five times of the day, spent alone. Tanya Traboulsi creates, with restraint and distance, a sibling of herself. This staging of the self and its mirrored…