In a region where women are regarded as an economic burden, Gauri Gill photographs girls in acts of quiet daring.
A collective of artists reimagines contemporary Greece.
In Eritrea, a young photographer pursues a cinematic vision.
At the Columbus Museum of Art, photographers look to the light in the sky.
An emerging guard of young, female photographers carves out a new brand of feminism.
Lebanese photographer Rasha Kahil turns comments from online trolls into a powerful exhibition.
Geoff Dyer remembers the life of an acclaimed critic and author.
The iconic actress and legendary photographer talk about cameras, color, and what it means to be a woman in the arts.
Uri McMillan speaks with Renée Cox about icons and avatars of black style, from Angela Davis to Beyoncé.
After years traversing the U.S. together in a van, the photographer and her son sit down for a candid interview.
In his new body of work, the experimental photographer uses Flint’s contaminated tap water to create daring abstractions with a political edge.
A preview of the international photography festival in Ethiopia.
Aperture remembers the life of the Southern photographer, whose work evokes the power of passing time.
On dance floors from the Bronx to Baltimore, the artist captures LGBT youth who refuse to be forgotten.
Ahead of her new exhibition in London, Gillian Wearing speaks about Claude Cahun, self-portraiture, and feminist icons.
Elizabeth Huber reflects on Ken Gonzales-Day and the history of lynching in California.
Echoing the languid melodies of the South, Shane Lavalette finds fragments of oral tradition in the visual world.
After years in a Boston attic, Mark Morrisroe’s dreamy, unpolished early work is on display in a rare exhibition in New York.
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.