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Recap of Aperture Magazine Issue #216 “Fashion” Launch Party with Inez and Vinoodh at the Gagosian Shop in New York City.
From the Fall 2014 issue of Aperture Magazine, #216, “Fashion”, guest-editors Inez & Vinoodh.
A piece by Charles Bowden, originally published in Aperture magazine issue #205 on the beauty and dangers of primal appetites.
For Aperture magazine’s 50th anniversary issue #167, Charles Bowden considers Aperture and the often revelatory experience of looking at photographs.
The story of Hercule Florence, who invented an early form of photography in Brazil while studying the Amazon’s birdsong.
Agnaldo Farias on Bárbara Wagner, featured in Aperture magazine issue #215, “The São Paulo Issue”
Leo Rubinfien and Philip Lorca diCorcia revisit the Garry Winogrand archive.
Ronaldo Entler maps a selection of some of the most important photography collectives working in the city of São Paulo for Aperture Magazine #215.
Christopher Phillips on the work of Caio Reisewitz, from Aperture magazine #215, Summer 2014.
The Editors’ Note from Aperture magazine #213 Summer 2014, The São Paulo Issue.
Greil Marcus muses on the Soundtrack to Nan Goldin’s The Ballad of Sexual Dependency.
Matt Wolf’s newest documentary Teenage is on tour now, showing in theatres across the United States.
From “Documentary, Expanded”, Stephen Mayes reflects on documentary photography’s radically shifting terrain.
From “Documentary, Expanded”, Lev Manovich discusses the emerging field of social-media visualization.
For “Documentary, Expanded”, Teru Kuwayama discusses Basetrack, Afghanistan, and the advantages of social media reporting.
Susan Meiselas discusses how documentary photographers can respond to a transformed media environment.
Jacob King reviews “What is a Photograph?”, on view at International Center of Photography through May 4, 2014.
In memory of Tom Sandberg, Aperture republishes Carlo McCormick’s review of his 2007 P.S.1/ MoMA exhibition.
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.