In her latest exhibition, On Rape, Spanish photographer Laia Abril creates a narrative calling out institutional rape culture and victim-blaming, phenomena that are all too prevalent around the globe.
All in Theme Month
In her latest exhibition, On Rape, Spanish photographer Laia Abril creates a narrative calling out institutional rape culture and victim-blaming, phenomena that are all too prevalent around the globe.
Jermaine Francis is a documentary portrait photographer, exploring and understanding the world around him through his imagery.
Xavier Scott Marshall is a young, up-and-coming Trinidadian-American artist with a focus on identity, interpersonal relationships, and self-expression.
Melissa Alcena is a Bahamian photographer using her platform to amplify and share black Bahamian voices and stories.
Utilizing vivid colors in what appears to be the realm of dreams, Kriss Munsya’s project “The Eraser” contemplates guilt, community and the memories that define us.
Stephen Kent Johnson is a New York-based interior design photographer. In this interview, Stephen discusses his background, experiences as an interior photographer, and his work on Jack Pierson's New York apartment.
In our interview with photographer Martyn Thompson, we discuss the allure of “the artist’s studio”, printing on the “wrong” kind of paper, and finding the light.
In 1992, Larry Sultan’s Pictures from Home was published to great critical acclaim.
In this interview with acclaimed NYC based interior photographer and designer Vicente Wolf, we discuss his photographic inspirations, how his Cuban heritage influences his elegant aesthetic, and how viewing his spaces through the lens has shifted how he creates them.
Rizzuto’s intentional subversion of the natural order—of still life as an artistic genre, but also of life itself—hides a deeper meaning.
Oliveri has an eye for decay, a critical skill that pervades the history of still-life painting and photography.
With his upcoming exhibition at L’ANGLE gallery in Hendaye, France, Toshio Shimamura will present a series of still lifes that makes flowers feel much larger than life.
"I like to make aesthetic images of course—that, I cannot help doing, to make things really clean and aesthetic. But when it's only about aesthetics, it's also a bit boring. I want an undertone of something that is off.”
Mary Ellen Bartley’s latest series, 7 Things Again and Again is a vibrant, timely, and relevant continuation of her captivating still life work.
Kronental’s photography reminds us that even in forgotten and financially underprivileged places beauty can be found.
The more you know about the building, its history, and function, the easier it is to find the right shots for evoking the narrative you seek