The photographer Adraint Bereal captures the agony and ecstasy of what it is to be a Black college student in the United States.
From monographs by Ming Smith and Deana Lawson to compendiums about activism and fashion, here are must-read books that envision Black lives.
Since the 1980s, the London-based organization has propelled a commitment to the visibility of Black artists by centering identity and human rights.
Winner of the 2021 Aperture Portfolio Prize, Smallwood was inspired by the history of Seneca Village, a nineteenth-century Black community in New York.
A solo exhibition celebrates six decades of Barnor’s cosmopolitan photography in Ghana and the United Kingdom.
In the 1970s, a group of photographers made poetic, affirmative representations of Black life. But why did most museums fail to recognize or validate their efforts?
By showing Black life as leisure, repose, and outdoor play, Mitchell expands our visual vocabulary of race and space.
In these photographs, queer acts and communal yearning flourish beyond the confines of mainstream gay culture.
Creating tender scenes with friends and lovers, the LA-based artist offers a stirring vision of everyday ritual.
In the 1960s, Kwame Brathwaite’s fashion photographs sent a riveting message about Black culture and freedom.
In his glittering portraits, the artist is building an alternate world.
A new book revisits W.E.B. Du Bois’s landmark 1900 exhibition on Black American identity.
Theaster Gates revisits the legendary archives of the Johnson Publishing Company.
In an interview, the visual activist speaks about courage, rethinking history, and the politics of exclusion.
The young photography duo Jalan and Jibril Durimel are transforming the fashion world’s visions of beauty.
Aperture’s issue on craft features photographers who make pictures the slow way—building camera obscuras, creating photograms, and laboring in traditional darkrooms to make handmade, unrepeatable forms.