In Bodies of Wood, an artist challenges ideas about gender and violence.
Behind the scenes of the Brooklyn Museum’s landmark exhibition about revolutionary feminist artists.
Suits that pop with loud colors and dazzling patterns, complete with a nearly ubiquitous bowtie, define the…
Daido Moriyama speaks about his Provoke days and capturing the streets of Tokyo.
The influential curator reflects on the evolving narratives of photography in Africa.
As Japan’s capital transformed, Yutaka Takanashi deployed a radical style to picture urban change.
For twenty-five years, Lauren Greenfield has chronicled the rise and fallout of consumerism and celebrity culture.
In a new film, photographer Mikhael Subotzky takes on two hundred years of white masculinity.
How have West Coast photographers subverted the mythology of California?
From student demonstrations to farmers in revolt, Kazuo Kitai captured the social tumult of 1960s Japan.
Japanese curator Rei Masuda discusses how postwar Japanese photographers adapted to a new era.
Aperture recently spoke with Eric Gottesman about photographic liberation.
Student protests shook late-1960s Japan. Hitomi Watanabe bore witness from inside the movement.
A new exhibition in Seattle explores the ambiguity of what is yet to come
In the first of an ongoing series of interviews about Japanese photography with Tsuyoshi Ito, Curator Simon Baker discusses the radical new vision of the 1960s.
Drawing inspiration from Walker Evans, Stephen Hilger photographed a city’s disappearing neighborhood.
A former Riot Girrl, Becca Albee’s photography unpacks the politics of color.
The four artists in Torrent Tea are redefining narratives of Black and Queer bodies on the Internet.
Aperture’s fall issue, “Arrhythmic Mythic Ra,” refracts themes of family, social history, and the astrophysical through the eyes of guest editor Deana Lawson, one of the most compelling photographers working today.