From the gold rush to e-waste, Lisa Barnard’s new photobook offers a visual biography of a precious commodity.
Throughout his long career, David Goldblatt has used the camera to reflect the social realities of South Africa.
For more than fifty years, the South African photographer has documented the structures of a divided society.
With uncompromising directness, Margaret Courtney-Clarke photographs the lives and landscapes of Namibia.
In David Goldblatt’s photographs from apartheid to the present, a striking account of South African life.
Aperture magazine’s editors on our Fall 2015 issue and its nine in-depth interviews.
Isabel Stevens reviews Everything Was Moving: Photography from the 60s and 70s at the Barbican Art Gallery, London.
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.