What keeps a photographer returning to a particular subject, theme, place, or person?
Inspired by Virginia Woolf’s pioneering novel “Orlando,” Aperture’s summer issue presents original photographs and writings that celebrate openness, curiosity, and human possibility.
In the age of climate change, how are photographers and artists envisioning dramatically politicized landscapes?
In relationships and communities, an expanding vision of what families can be.
Like any metropolis, LA is dynamic, changing, evolving, contested.
The world—and the word—is in the process of becoming less and less dependent on paper. Our reading…
Since Amelia was 3 years old, she has been her mother’s muse and the subject of her…
An interview with Kathy Ryan, director of photography at the New York Times Magazine, on her recently…
Erwin Olaf’s approach to storytelling is uniquely evocative and enticingly ambiguous. Erwin Olaf: Volume II is a…
On June 3, 2014, Rob Hornstra and Arnold van Bruggen joined us at our gallery to discuss…
Doug DuBois was first introduced to a group of teenagers from the Russell Heights housing estate while he…
We sat down with LaToya Ruby Frazier to discuss the realization of her first book, The Notion…
From iconic monographs by master photographers, to groundbreaking, never-before-published work, here are the perfect photography gifts for everyone on your list.
Stephen Shore’s Uncommon Places is indisputably a canonic body of work—a touchstone for those interested in photography…
This Is Mars offers a thrilling visual experience of the surface of the red planet. The multi-award-winning…
How feminism has shaped photography? An introduction to the winter 2016 issue of Aperture
Magnum’s Square Sale, online now through June 10th, is an opportunity to collect decisive moments from Magnum photographers.
Aperture editors introduce “Odyssey,” the magazine’s Spring 2016 issue.
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.