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For more than fifty years, the South African photographer has documented the structures of a divided society.
At the Museum of Sex, a new look at the prolific—and provocative—Japanese photographer.
A group exhibition in Paris navigates documentary strategies in a directionless world.
The sculptor’s rarely seen photographic series reveals the power of memory.
At the Art Gallery of Ontario’s annual photography prize, four artists compete for your vote.
Asserting black identity, photographers take center stage at a bold new museum.
Raghubir Singh, a protégé of Henri Cartier-Bresson, captured the fleeting beauty of twentieth-century India.
In a new exhibition, Daido Moriyama returns to his icons and obsessions.
At Walden Pond, New England-based photographer S.B. Walker meditates on the cruel contradictions of modernity.
Mohamed Bourouissa explores how a neighborhood on the verge of gentrification etches out marks of distinction.
From Malick Sidibé to Stephen Shore, here are the must-see photography exhibitions in New York, Los Angeles, Paris, and beyond.
An ambitious exhibition grapples with the conditions of our time — but can images provoke social change?
With dark humor, the photographer plays with perception, space, and surface.
In Crimea and the Caribbean, Nicholas Muellner’s new photobook is a tropical gothic of seduction and violence.
At the world’s most prestigious contemporary art exhibition, photographers are on the margins.
Sam Contis’s first photobook revels in the land, skin, and mythologies of the American West.
Spanning decades, an exhibition of the iconic photographer’s work in India reveals the fraught nature of photojournalism.
Katy Grannan’s first film weaves the joys and horrors of everyday life in a dangerous neighborhood of California.
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.