The latest edition of FotoFest features artists and collectives from around the world who consider the weight of history on the present.
An exhibition in England asks how a generation of blue-collar British photographers have responded to the rising tide of neoliberalism.
Through her playful and provocative collaborations with strangers, July consistently asks what we want from power, technology, and love.
Inspired by 2000s-era teen-girl magazines, Elizabeth Renstrom uses a mix of real and AI-generated imagery to consider the ongoing effects of media on young women.
Can photography be a form of play? The recent Foto/Industria Biennale shows how improvisation and mugging for the camera are as old as the medium.
The artist, who died in 2021, played a crucial role in establishing downtown Manhattan as both a scene and a style.
An exhibition pairing the celebrated photographer with the renowned ceramicist highlights their shared fascination with objects and images.
A retrospective in London showcases the brilliance and breadth of the photographer’s sensitive portraiture.
In his videos and multimedia works about Vietnam, Tuan Andrew Nguyen shows how large-scale events reverberate through interpersonal stories.
In the exhibition “I See You,” the photographer’s work is a study of self-presentation, showing how the camera can be an interlocutor.
An exhibition in London of the artist and suffragette’s vibrant work uncovers a pioneer of photography.
An exhibition at the International Center of Photography offers an expansive take on how images can be used to create, sustain, and destroy intimacy.
An exhibition in Switzerland explores the intersection between photobook publishing and art forms that combine text and image.
Kyotographie is distinct among photo festivals for its clever site-specific exhibitions in many of the city’s stunning locations.
How does the Polish artist transform seemingly simple movements into significant emblems?
In a dual exhibition, Lebohang Kganye and Sue Williamson consider trauma, healing, and the potential for transformation.
Claudia Andujar has advocated for the Yanomami people throughout her career. In a major exhibition, her photographs coexist with Indigenous voices.
A rare exhibition of the influential photographer’s work highlights one year of prodigious creativity.
This spring, Aperture presents “Counter Histories,” an issue produced in collaboration with Magnum Foundation and informed by their ongoing Counter Histories grant initiative, featuring artists from around the world who tell new stories about how the past informs the present.