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From teenage portraits to postwar Manhattan, here are must-see photography exhibitions in New York.
An exhibition in Amsterdam revisits Ed van der Elsken’s passionate vision of twentieth-century life.
A sprawling exhibition showcases Wolfgang Tillmans’s restless curiosity—about everything.
The French artist’s most recent work explores the dark side of pop culture and beauty.
Three celebrated photographers push the limits of sexuality and surveillance.
How has feminist photography changed since the 1970s?
From protest images to the poetics of architecture, here are this winter’s must-see photography exhibitions in New York.
In Europe and the United States, Stéphane Duroy charts the course of “big” history.
A girl-powered social media movement becomes an interactive exhibition.
At the Getty, photography holds up a mirror to the media.
Marilyn Minter brings her brand of glittery feminism to the Brooklyn Museum.
At the Columbus Museum of Art, photographers look to the light in the sky.
In his new body of work, the experimental photographer uses Flint’s contaminated tap water to create daring abstractions with a political edge.
Echoing the languid melodies of the South, Shane Lavalette finds fragments of oral tradition in the visual world.
After years in a Boston attic, Mark Morrisroe’s dreamy, unpolished early work is on display in a rare exhibition in New York.
Merging images and words, conceptual artists in the 1970s advanced a new visual language.
In the late 1940s, the photographer’s photographer reveled in the contradictory energies of urban life.
In his first museum retrospective, Anthony Hernandez finds melancholy beauty in a city of contrasts.
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.