James Bidgood’s queer and candy-colored photographs were camp before camp was stylish.
Meet the winner of the 2018 Aperture Portfolio Prize.
Matthew Leifheit conjures history and fantasy in the fabled gay enclave.
A preview of the Whitney Museum’s survey of the iconoclastic New York artist.
Tobias Zielony captures the colors and moods of Ukraine’s queer nightlife.
Dasha Yastrebova captures a fleeting moment in Moscow’s queer underground.
Aperture remembers the surprising, defiant work of the Chinese photographer, whose playful vision cleverly pushed the limits of self expression.
In his staged, gel-lit nudes, Jimmy DeSana explored the body as object.
What does photography offer the trans feminism movement?
On dance floors from the Bronx to Baltimore, the artist captures LGBT youth who refuse to be forgotten.
A recent forum at MoMA reveals a rich, often-overlooked thread of queer history and photography.
Vince Aletti recalls Tomorrow’s Man, Peter Hujar, James Dean, and the thrill of discovering queer pictures.
Following the attack on the Pulse club, artists and writers consider the nightclub as a symbolic space in queer culture.
A conversation with the Johannesburg-based photographer about photography and activism, her latest series, Black Beauties, and her influences.
Aperture magazine launches an exclusive opportunity for photography collectors to own work published in the pages of the magazine.
Vince Aletti, Richard Meyer, and Catherine Opie reflect on the term queer and its relationship with photography
Why an issue on queer photography? The editors on our Spring 2015 issue, exploring queer perspectives on photography.
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.