At the Art Gallery of Ontario’s annual photography prize, four artists compete for your vote.
Asserting black identity, photographers take center stage at a bold new museum.
Where can a photograph take you?
Raghubir Singh, a protégé of Henri Cartier-Bresson, captured the fleeting beauty of twentieth-century India.
Are we living in a state of emergency feminism?
How can listening to images reveal the visual histories of the African diaspora?
How did Michael Schmidt’s independent workshop change postwar German photography?
The young photography duo Jalan and Jibril Durimel are transforming the fashion world’s visions of beauty.
Jessica Lynne speaks with photographer Devin Allen about his new book “A Beautiful Ghetto.”
Is the world finally ready for Collier Schorr’s women?
In a new body of work, the photographer confronts the country’s postelection landscape with dark humor.
From Horst P. Horst to Viviane Sassen, fashion’s novelty, desire, fantasy, and seduction.
The French brand’s new book is a collage of postcards, snapshots, and influential commissions.
In two new bodies of work, the artist considers space, architecture, and the nature of collaboration.
Fatoumata Diabate’s traveling studio revives the golden age of Malian studio portraiture.
In a new exhibition, Daido Moriyama returns to his icons and obsessions.
From Zambia to Japan, photographer Jonas Bendiksen tells their stories.
In France, photographer Alessandra Sanguinetti injects elements of fairy tales and fantasy into quotidian scenes.
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.