From the daguerreotype to the iPhone, “Mining Photography” explores how the exploitation of labor and the environment has always shadowed the medium’s history.
With museums and galleries closed, the touch-screen world is the only one we have.
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.
A new exhibition at Salon 94 in New York brings to light Gordon Parks’s long-lost photographs from a breakthrough 1956 Life photoessay.
William J. Simmons on Despite Intensions at Galeria Pedro Alfacinha, Lisbon, and its connections to the New Museum’s recent Sarah Charlesworth survey.
Here, in an excerpt from the book, Aperture Foundation’s executive director Chris Boot speaks with Kubota about his beginnings as a photographer.
Peggy Roalf talks with Richard Learoyd about his portraits made with a camera obscura. Day For Night, a monograph of his work will be available this Fall.
A review of Candida Höfer’s recent show at Sean Kelly Gallery, New York.
Aperture exhibitions are currently on three continents, from Asia to Europe to North America. How does it come together?
Photography exhibitions around New York City.
A new photography exhibition at Aperture Gallery opens Wednesday, October 17.
A look at the history of manipulated photography.
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.