Priya Suresh Kambli works with pictures of her family in India and the US, making connections between past and present.
The photographer Adraint Bereal captures the agony and ecstasy of what it is to be a Black college student in the United States.
In two recent series, the photographer references fragments of antiquity, pulling the past into the present.
Syjuco’s rigorous photographs show how interrogating institutional collections can be a potent tool in decolonizing American history.
The renowned fashion photographer’s previously unseen experimental collages tell the story of a fictional designer who disappears at the height of her career.
In his collaborative multimedia project “The Repros,” Jojo Gronostay poses a timely critique of clothing brands, global trade, and neocolonialism.
Strachan speaks of his work in terms of a West African street festival where dance, poetry, music, and the performing arts are jumbled together in an exuberant whole.
In this series of collages, Thomas draws on stories from Aperture in the 2010s, a decade during which looking back was as vital as looking forward.
These previously unpublished selections of 35mm slides confirm and extend the stubborn singularity of Leiter’s color language.
In stirring portraits of his family, Steinmetz recalls the enduring influence of a 1980s issue of Aperture< about mother-daughter relationships.
In a series of photographs that conceal or duplicate human forms, Whitaker imagines how the digital revolution has fragmented everyday experience and meaning.
For the photographer Maja Daniels, history is an uneasy conglomerate of fiction and testimony.
The photographer’s compelling and confounding images riff on the idea of the domestic realm as a private theater of Black humanity.
In the early twentieth century, Nichols made dreamlike photographs of the frontier that feel both intimate and faraway.
The Soviet-era Czech Surrealist responded to totalitarian rule with an austere but rebellious sense of humor.
In his black-and-white photographs, Oh creates a record of the denizens of Itaewon, a district known for glamorous outsiders of all kinds.
In her photographs about youth, queerness, and protest, Boulos shows that desire is a form of power.
Recalling his family history, the Oregon-based photographer imagines the complexity—and possibility—of American landscapes.
Aperture presents “Image Worlds to Come: Photography & AI,” a timely and urgent issue that explores how artificial intelligence is quickly transforming the field of photography and our broader culture of images.