Are Israel and the West Bank an oasis, homeland, or colonial state? Twelve photographers set out to describe a contested territory.
In her recent videos and installations, Amie Siegel navigates the threshold of art and commerce.
Notorious for photographs that pushed private desire into the public realm, two major exhibitions in Los Angeles consider the artist—and the man—in full.
Five years after the devastating earthquake and tsunami, a group of visionary Japanese photographers responds to a national tragedy.
Ellsworth Kelly, the Guerilla Girls, and the Italian coast. Here are the must-see photography exhibitions in New York this spring.
In a new documentary, renowned photographer Josef Koudelka turns to a divided landscape.
In São Paulo, an exhibition explores the global reach of modern Brazilian photography.
From the London Blitz to Hitler’s apartment, Lee Miller captured some of the most audacious images of World War II.
From Kurt Klagsbrunn, a midcentury vision of Brazil’s most photogenic city.
At the Art Institute of Chicago, three artists provoke timely questions about race and sexuality.
From the rush of Niagara Falls to Elizabeth Taylor’s bedroom, a chronicler of American life presents two concurrent exhibitions.
The legendary photographer’s retrospective is here today, gone tomorrow.
With provocative self-portraits from the 1970s, a pioneer of Body Art makes his New York debut.
Renowned for his vivacious snapshots of friends and family, a new exhibition in Amsterdam showcases the early color photographs of a bon vivant.
At a seventeenth-century villa in Kyoto, a young photographer merged modernist vision with exquisite design. Thirty years later, he returned for a second look.
With the new season in full swing, Aperture’s editors select five must-see photography exhibitions on view or opening soon in New York City.
Two Paris museums put women photographers in the spotlight. But are gender-specific exhibitions relevant today?
The Museum of Modern Art’s New Photography exhibition considers contemporary image-making in an increasingly globalized yet formless world.
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.