In the dusty alleyways and vanilla fields of Madagascar, a silent struggle unfolds. A daily fight marked by sweat and perseverance, where hope continues to grow despite adversity. Where the...
Executed in Alexandria, Aswan, Cairo, Luxor, and the Sinai region, RESONANCE delves into how lens-based narratives can establish new visual parameters, redefining conflict and aftermath photography in a manner that resonates with...
Through Outside Eyes chronicles a year of street photography in the vibrant city of Valencia, Spain. Over the course of a year, Pardue immersed himself in the city’s rhythm in...
RAGE PEN evolved from research about violent acts charged with frustration, which Blackmore investigated as the Honorary Research Associate with Slade School of Fine Art and UCL Art Museum. The...
All at Once Collapsing Together is a monograph of Caoimhín Gaffney’s work across film, photography, and writing, which uses fiction to imagine new ways of relating to the natural world....
This publication highlights a 3 year project and series of works by James L Hayes in collaboration with artist and composer Peter Power. The Score is a multidisciplinary artwork exploring the heritage,...
To the people of Dublin who've let me catch them in the act. The Bullies are now goneThe rule of thirds.Go where the good stories well lit."I sometimes feel let...
Salt sticky hair, ice cream smiles, sandcastles and sun-speckled freckles. Small boats, overfishing, plastic pollution and rising sea levels. As climate change imposes more circumstantial realities on us, the sea...
There is beauty in the everyday, it’s there, but you might not always be able to see it. EVERYDAY DELIGHT might be something to be enjoyed between the rise and...
The publication 'H – The Notion of Humanist Photography' brings together over 23 multifaceted artistic positions and includes four extensive essays as well as numerous texts about the artist’s works....
Inspired by the photography of Weegee and Enrique Metinides, and films such as Metropolis and Un Chien Andalou, Compulsion confirms Alex Prager's vivid cinematic aesthetic. Unlike her previous work, however,...
This catalog has been published on the occasion of Alex Prager's Part One: The Mountain, 2021 and Part Two: Run, 2022 Exhibitions at Lehmann Maupin. It contains photographic work from...
The Chinese are not alone in their fascination for creatures that dance on the boundary between the human and animal worlds. Maoist ideology in China had long criminalised such interest...
Issue 10 of Amc2 is published to coincide with LagosPhoto 2014 and draws on three contrasting Africa-related collections from the Archive of Modern Conflict: Nigeria’s ‘Nollywood’ film industry’s obsession with the...
Printed in burgundy, blue and dark green versions, Issue 3 of Amc2 is a commemorative visitor’s guide to London 2012. The 40-page booklet offers many useful culinary and cultural tips to help...
The second issue of AMC2 features the funerary practices of the Fali tribe of Cameroon, Martin Parr’s appreciation of the concrete hotels of the Spanish Costas, the tragic story of Henri Gaudier-Brzeska’s...
Enigmatic Hungarian photographer Gergely Papp (1922–2000) was born into a peasant family, on a farmstead in Pusztaecseg (now Ecsegfalva) in Eastern Hungary. He would live there for the rest of...
In Don’t Smile Now … Save it for Later, Thijs Groot Wassink shows us London from the viewpoint of a photo booth. Go into the booth, open the curtain, feed in...
‘Tokyo Tokyo consists of a series of diptychs in which the mythical “decisive moment” of traditional documentary photography is lampooned. In their projects, WassinkLundgren playfully turn the unwritten rules of the...
This is a second, updated, and completely reformatted edition of Antony Cairns’ original, handmade book LDN from 2010. In this new edition, the large format and fine 170gsm Claro paper draw the viewer...
More Cooning with Cooners arose out of the discovery of a series of anonymous Kodachrome slides documenting one family’s 1960s racoon-hunting adventures in Ohio, USA. The book pays homage to (and...
Published to coincide with Archive of Modern Conflict’s contribution to the exhibition Conflict, Time, Photography at Tate Modern, London, AMC2 Issue 11: A Guide for the Protection of the Public in Peacetime presents the landscapes...
The inaugural issue of AMC2 journal brings together different groups of work that illuminate lost corners of our cultural life. Photography is, as ever, the keystone of the collection. The Archive of...
The Canadians playfully and informatively re-imagines one of the most revered photobooks of the 20th century, Robert Frank’s The Americans. The source for the imagery is the print archive of...
With the demise of Kodachrome film in 2009, the colour palette that in many ways defined an era also disappeared. The 200+ Kodachrome slides selected by Ed Jones and Timothy...
Unwanted Butterfly spent half of his 40 years behind bars, so he had plenty of time to have his whole body tattooed. He was an unusual sight in Socialist Hungary,...
Nein, Onkel: Snapshots From Another Front 1938–1945 is a photographic survey of a different, rarely glimpsed side of life in the Nazi Third Reich. It contains reproductions of 347 previously unpublished...
In September 1939, thousands of German soldiers were turned loose on Poland. In 1940, they descended on Holland, Belgium and France. In 1941 they went to the Balkans, and then...
The great technological leap that took place in the 19th century in optical lens systems such as the microscope meant that by the latter half of the century the exploration...
Issue 8 of Amc2 features a selection of full-length portraits, some black & white and others hand-coloured, made in Chinese studios between the 1930s and the 1980s. This serendipitous reunion of 60...
In 2011, New York-based street photographer Bruce Gilden was commissioned by the Archive of Modern Conflict to capture the people and places of London. Kalev Erickson, who accompanied Gilden in...
Collected Shadows, a touring exhibition curated by the Archive of Modern Conflict and first exhibited at Paris Photo in 2012. The works span a period from the early 1850s to...
Drawing on more than 100 unpublished photographs, including unseen images of some of the most famous and infamous Berlin clubs of the 1920s, Party! Party!! Party!!! depicts the Weimar Republic through the...
Issue 12 of Amc2 is about the space left by the disappearance of photography both as an idea and as a material object. It is also a memento mori for Frido Troost...
Ten real lives, ten photographs, ten journeys in time: the first killing of the Cold War, the dying hopes of a doomed aviator, the ghosts of Native America at Alcatraz,...
No one doubts Queen Victoria would have loved Colombia. She was known to suffer from orchid delirium and appointed an official Royal orchid expert whose name was Frederick Sanders. The...
‘This is what hatred did’ is the lapidary phrase that ends Amos Tutuola’s novel My Life in the Bush of Ghosts. When it was published in 1954, the novel provoked such...
Each copy contains one of three different stamped and numbered original Liu YiQing prints. The photographs in Happy Tonite have been selected by Ed Jones and James Welch from the collection of Chinese photography...
The hundreds of photographs gathered in Will Write Soon, lead us into the meanderings of day-to-day life in the towns and countryside of North America at the turn of the 20th...
Dry Hole is an intuitive selection of images extracted from a collection of Real Photo Postcards (RPPCs). David Thomson emphasises details contained within the larger frame of the postcards by cropping...
Don McCullin has been making photographs for more than 50 years, first capturing the small dramas of everyday life in 1950s London, then travelling to the world’s most dangerous conflict...
The Luton Auguries began with the purchase of the newspaper archives of the city of Luton. From this vast source material, Timothy Prus selects and assembles a series of images, creating a surrealist...
Do green people exist? A quick search brings up the legend of the green children of Woolpit. This tale recounts the discovery of a brother and sister who appeared largely...
The OODA Loop is known in business and in warfare. It was originally devised by John Boyd, a USAF officer who was active in the Korean war and who later...
‘The Night Climbers of Cambridge was published in 1937 by Chatto & Windus, a reputable house that had brought out the first English translations of Proust in 1922. The author was...
The first Earth-born creature to enter space was Laika, a stray dog from Moscow that blasted off aboard Sputnik 2 on 3 November 1957, heralding the beginning of the space...
Handle with gloves. Ink is not fixed and may smudge or transfer. TV Casualty is a graphic study of the horror of nostalgia in the decline of the American Dream. On...
The title of this two-volume set gives little clue to the content beyond the fact that 82 photos are included in each volume. Like some bureaucratic code, it marks but...
Is it a book, is it a sculpture? No, it’s a Me Nu. This work by Ruben Lundgren and Timothy Prus has been produced to coincide with their exhibition “Anything that...
This book tells the story of how plants arrived on this planet and gave rise to other forms of life. Using images archived at AMC (Archive of Modern Conflict), the book...
‘Right from the start, almost every appearance he made was catastrophic … catastrophe is his means of operation, and his central instrument of governance.’– Adi Ophir For their version of...
Roger Hilton (1911–1975) produced the works now known as the ‘Late Gouaches’ and ‘Night Letters’ during the final two years of his life at his cottage in Cornwall’s West Penwith....
Silvermine is a set of five photo albums each containing 20 prints. The negatives were salvaged from a recycling plant on the edge of Beijing, where they had been sent to...
Edited from 25 years of work (1979–2005), The British Landscape is a collation of John Davies’ revealing landscapes. Rich in detail and narrative, and contrasting scenes of nature apparently untouched by humans...
Published to coincide with Notes Home, an exhibition curated by the Archive of Modern Conflict’s Timothy Prus and Ed Jones for Format Festival 2013, issue 5 of Amc2 features picture postcards from the archive’s permanent collection....
Penelope Umbrico’s project Solar Eclipses is made up of a collection of collages created using images of solar eclipses found in the New York Public Library Picture Collection. She creates...
Out Of Order: Bad Display III consists of images of screens cropped from used and broken LCD TVs, computer monitors, and laptops found for sale on e-shops. Now out of order,...
In the midst of the global financial crisis that began in 2008, Penelope Umbrico started noticing large quantities of used office desks for sale online. In the pictures advertising them,...
Dubliner Colm Pierce's intimate and sensitive work spotlights Sheriff Street and its surrounding areas at a time of change. The photographs capture the area, nestled between Dublin's docklands and the...
'Dubs' collects Tony Murray's evocative photographs of Dubliners and their city captured as the 1970s gave way to the 1980s. The work is a powerful portrayal of the citizens of...
Belfast is a city segregated and divided: its so-called peace walls , built to separate Unionist and Nationalist communities, are taller in places even than the Berlin Wall. For his...
The project titled At Mirrored River was inspired by the Gaelic word Teannalach (pron. “chann-ah-lack”). Teannalach is a Gaelic word used in the West of Ireland which means awareness. In...
Alex Prager is a photographer and filmmaker whose elaborate sets and complex staging draw on a rich cultural heritage of cinematic style, informed by street photography, to produce work that...
Publication accompanying the exhibition at New Art Projects, London, by Brian Teeling and Dorje de Burgh, featuring commissioned essays by Una Mullally and Sam Moore. The exhibition, as documented in...
Few subjects can evoke the entwinement of the corporeal, personal, and political so succinctly as that of hair. Throughout history, hair has been charged with significance and is resonant with...
Ukrainian soldiers engage in intensive combat training at an unmarked location; a female choir rehearse in a Sarajevo theatre once used to stage defiant performances during the Bosnian War; youths...
Our philosophical understanding of the photograph may find its bearings in notions of time and the past, but our tools for making images are imbedded in the aggressive stride of...
This extraordinary work, captured between 2005 and 2019, challenges the conventional narrative of East versus West and offers a striking visual exploration of life in post-industrial America and Russia. Through...
In you can’t go home again, Antigoni Papantoni reflects on her experiences of the past decade, feeling like a sailor adrift between cultures, gradually losing her sense of belonging. This...
Have a Nice Day Press is delighted to present A Faggot is a Unit, an artist book by Berlin-based artist, filmmaker, and writer Padraig Robinson. This publication brings together two original screenplays for...
TAIPEI; a solo long-form project by Yemeni American artist Ibi Ibrahim. Roaming through foreign streets in the island’s capital, Ibrahim’s extrinsic eye lingers on corners of mundane quietude. The act of archiving...
I’m handy is a photobook featuring cropped images of hands captured by Catherine throughout her career. Accompanied by short, humorous words, these photographs highlight one of the most expressive parts...
Tangier Island is home to the Chesapeake Bay’s isolated community of “watermen,” who have lived off crab fishing since the mid-nineteenth century. The island is sinking and shrinking at an...
Using CGI, Canadian artist Benjamin Freedman presents a captivating image sequence which meticulously reconstructs his childhood memories of a family road trip to Maine in 1999. Blurring the line between...
Urthworks draws on a trilogy of films by Ben Rivers imagining the future of a planet at three stages after environmental collapse. Working with 16mm film and digital imaging technology,...
For her first feature film, The Virgin Suicides, Sofia Coppola commissioned British fashion photographer Corinne Day to join her on set. Renowned for her unadorned, grungy photographs of iconic models...
The eighth publication from SMUT Press is After Life, the debut photobook by London-based Italian photographer Michele Baron. Known for his spontaneous and punchy photographic style, Baron captures the underground...
HeghDI' vem ghaH, tu'lu' Dinosaur (which translates from Klingon as “Upon awakening, the dinosaur was still there”, a micro-story by Augusto Monterroso) tells a previously unknown story about the Klingon race....
In Leve, Martín Estol claims a space for fantasy. As opposed to a conventional reading of the family biography, text and images coalesce in this account, exploring and honouring the figure...
HUN is Julia Mejnertsen’s long-term photographic research about our perception of nature. Through her mother’s hunting practice, the Danish photographer reflects both on the complex family bonds we build and...
Los tamarindos de La Concha [La Concha’s Tamarinds] is the continuation of photographer Ricardo Cases's urban exploration, which began in 2018 in the city of Valencia and was published in 2023...
Paddy Kiernan is a musician and photographer, based in Dublin. His image Kerrymount Rise was selected for the TLP Edition A New Normal, published in 2020. In 2021, he self-published...
Fantasy Island offers a comprehensive exploration of the last 50 years of Irish photography, featuring the work of 70 Irish artists. The publication takes a stripped-back approach, prioritising the strength...
Inspired by political campaign posters from the Polish 2023 parliamentary elections, The Powers That Be photobook contemplates the links between electioneering and political outcomes. Whilst travelling around Poland researching coal mining...
DOMESTIC is grounded in research on the food production industry, and focuses on relationships between humans and animals, eaters and eaten. The project stems from a batch of found 16mm...
'The First Draft' is an artistic homecoming, bringing internationally influenced work back to the roots of Rich Gilligan's creative journey and offers a contemplative look at the themes of belonging,...
Sionnachuighim, meaning “I play the Fox”, is thought to be one possible origin of the word shenanigans, and in this work, shenanigans take centre stage. As a teenager, I entered...
TEMPORARILY OUT OF STOCK Wren Day, also known Lá an Dreoílín, is a traditional celebration that takes place on December 26th in various parts of Ireland, including Dingle, County Kerry....
Featuring 100 stunning color photographs of queer, interracial couples taken by a renowned photographer for the New York Times Magazine, Time, Rolling Stone, and more, this incredible photo and story collection depicts...
It’s time to join the Egyptian Wanderer, Amr El-Bayoumi, in his unique photographic tales of adventure, curiosity and creativity. A wonderful, imaginative experience into what makes us all artists. Amr...
“Carpoolers is a deceptively powerful photobook, so well constructed that we’re suddenly eager to see more of Carpoolers remains a highly critical and vital body of work in which we...
“In my opinion, Bob Kolbrener is the most brilliant California landscape photographer since Ansel Adams.”— Gary F. Kurutz, Curator Emeritus of Special Collections, California State Library The second monograph on...
This extraordinary group of photographs, made between 1988 and 1991, provides a compelling portrait both of the city itself and of the time in which they were made. Steinmetz’s relationship...
The photographs in Americans Seen were made between 1979 and 1986, when Sage Sohier was a young photographer living in Boston. As Sohier writes in her introduction, “In that pre-digital and...
Time is not bound by culture, and neither is nature. Jeff Liao followed the Chinese 24 Solar Terms timetable to document the micro changes that happen in this phenomenal “man-made...
Beautifully printed in duotone on Korean art paper, Fleeting Gestures features an accordion binding with cloth covers, presented in a raven-black cloth slipcase. RJ Muna’s photographic series, Fleeting Gestures, captures various images...
Tavitian and Moriyama both focus on framing everyday subjects, capturing moments on 35mm film while embracing the unpredictability of the medium. Their work reflects a deep fascination with urban landscapes...
BIT FACADE is a 224 page compilation of photographic work taken over a number of years and printed while on residency at FLACC Sculpture Workspace, Genk, Belgium, and designed by...
022 - Morten Lasskogen is the twenty-second in an ongoing Bi-Monthly series publishing the work of emerging photographers. ‘All my art revolves around a profound fascination with light. For me,...
During a transformative period in Irish history, ‘Who Fears to Speak’ is a project which hones in on the experience of the young people from the republican stronghold areas of...
Standing in stark contrast to the sanitised, shampooed, images of dogs seen in so many calendars and magazines, the Acts of Dog zine is a small sample from a much...
From the simple fried egg to the Michelin-starred masterpiece, the grabbable snack or the family recipe passed on through generations, every meal has its place. Within the pages of FOOD...
Featuring The Top 100 images selected for AUTO PHOTO Awards 2022, AUTO PHOTO 01 celebrates and showcases creative automotive photography from photographers around the world. AUTO PHOTO Awards is dedicated to...
Featuring The Top 100 images selected for AUTO PHOTO Awards 2023, AUTO PHOTO 02 celebrates and showcases creative automotive photography from photographers around the world. AUTO PHOTO Awards is dedicated to...
Featuring The Top 100 images selected for AUTO PHOTO Awards 2024, AUTO PHOTO 03 celebrates the best creative automotive photography from photographers around the world. AUTO PHOTO Awards is dedicated to...
Following on from the popular exhibition (curated by Shutter Hub member Justin Carey as part of our Curate for the Community project) NIGHT MOODS is filled with 100 images exploring night photography in all...
There’s something wonderful about a road trip, a certain sense of nostalgia and adventure that can’t be matched.In these pages photographers transport us through their imagery, show us how they...
The crumpled sheets of an empty bed, fresh cut flowers in a drinking glass, cellophane dancing in a gust of wind – what does poetry look like? In these 100 poems without...
“Nowadays more and more I think of photography as the river, on which both banks one stays at the same time. The stories are on the first shore – well...
Sleeping in a Forest explores the liminal space between wakefulness and sleep, where the edges of reality soften, and the boundaries between humans and nature blur. Inspired by readings such as...
A photobook by New York based photographer Reggie McCafferty that explores the use of fiction to build a documentary language based in folklore and mythology. The book at once celebrates...
In recent decades, Ireland has experienced a significant shift from a deep rooted Catholic orthodoxy. This project explores how traditional Catholic practices, such as mass rocks, reenactments, holy wells and...
In recent decades, Ireland has experienced a significant shift from a deep rooted Catholic orthodoxy. This project explores how traditional Catholic practices, such as mass rocks, reenactments, holy wells and...
Every Glove is not just about boxing; it is about childhood, diverse cultures and the unwavering support that these young athletes receive from their coaches and mentors. In a small...
Last October, Una was posting a letter to Dorje from New York City when she found a poem on the counter of the post office. It was titled Grandfather’s Key,...
Ten years on, the iconic photograph of a young couple at the back of the bus still resonates. Featuring previously unpublished photographs, the Young Dubliners book is introduced by award...
In the Book of Genesis, Adam and Eve live out their post-banishment days somewhere “east of Eden”. In Frank Keane’s photobook, 'Heaven And A Hard Place', the rocks that form...
Pallas Projects Studios are very excited to announce the publication of "Traces in the Landscape: Stone Desert, Alps, and Atlantic Shore", a new artistic publication edited by artistic-director Mark Cullen,...
Keepsake is a handmade travel zine documenting some time spent in Kraków through a collection of photographs, ticket stubs, silly monotypes, sweet wrappers, and the little złoty the artists had...
UFO Presences explores the places where UFO sightings have taken place across America: in California, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, and of course the infamous Area 51, along South Central Nevada’s...
New Farmer pretends to be a collection of documentary photographs published by an agribusiness in the 1960s to celebrate the success of the Green Agricultural Revolution. As the narrative unfolds,...
'For nearly eight years, I worked as a musician in a wedding band, travelling all over Ireland. I had a feeling that I was seeing things I would never see...
This collaborative project between visual artist, Brian Teeling and arts writer, Jennie Taylor explores Crawford Art Gallery’s buildings and its immediate surroundings through a printed publication which is populated by...
Wet Dream is the second publication of photographic work by visual artist, Brian Teeling. This work has been commissioned by the Irish Museum of Modern Art and was first exhibited...
Nollaig Molloy’s A Confection of Photographs investigates the assembly of archives and Ireland’s working class histories. Almost one hundred images, each scanned and reproduced from a single storage box found in...
DISCOUNTED DUE TO SLIGHT DAMAGE ON SPINEWith this series, Boo George invites readers to explore his decade and a half long career. From working with celebrities such as Emma Watson,...
An investigation into the beauty, joy and validation that comes from everyday food. Billy Woods is a Belfast-based photographer and art director with a focus on documentary work, as well...
I saw it go up as a child/ Four corners hide a lucky coin A publication of stills and an extract of the libretto from ROMANTIC IRELAND (2024) Eimear Walshe’s...
Jeff Gibson’s relationship to art could hardly be described as narrow in its focus. For the best part of forty years, the Australian artist’s output has spanned continents and approaches,...
Very little about the photobooth experience has changed since its inception in the early twentieth century. There is a particular charm to its inherent simplicity and repetition. The framing is...
“Omen” reexamines the Farm Security Administration’s photographic archive, revealing a lesser-known narrative that challenges traditional views of American history. This book’s visual sequence breaks norms, creatively cropping images from the...
The body remains a battleground. Politicised, conceptualised and increasingly shared, our often-paradoxical relationship with the human form is nothing new, but finds itself heightened in the digitised, virtualised era of...
As the title states, this book is not about cars. The automobiles only function as a leitmotif to guide the viewer through Gruyaert’s varied oeuvre, which is characterised by a...
Memory is inherently porous and complex, as is memoriam. Our dealings with recollection and loss are personal, familial, and communal in their ambit. They shift and reshape with every conversation,...
Patrick Pound collects photographs as if on a dare. For thirty years, the New Zealand-born, Australian artist has been collecting other people’s photographs and placing them in his own peculiar categories....
The casual foundations of beach culture and beachwear are intrinsically recognisable to those who have spent time anywhere near the Australian coast. Chanel, selfie sticks, and illuminated screens are rarely...
Tim Coghlan’s 'Hell’s Gates II: Retribution' is the second complete volume of the 'Hell’s Gates' series, following the 2018 original (co-published by Knowledge Editions and Perimeter Editions in an edition...
The notion of 'The Well' is rich in metaphorical and symbolic potential for Melbourne-based artist Sarah Walker. Doubling as the title for her third book for Perimeter Editions, the idea...
'Of Petals, Pearls and Inherited Creatures examines emotional inheritance and female identity through an exploration of familial object histories and the intimate bonds between women in my family. Informed by...
021 - Merton Wu is the twenty-first in an ongoing Bi-Monthly series publishing the work of emerging photographers. As a photographer, Merton wants his images to communicate a sense of...
For over 25 years, Hido has crafted narratives through loose and mysterious suburban scenes, desolate landscapes, and cinematic portraits. Irrespective of its title, this is a book about hope...
In celebration of Michael Kenna's fiftieth year as a photographer, Nazraeli Press is thrilled to announce the publication of Michael Kenna: Photographs & Stories. This new monograph is printed on...
Published to coincide with a major 2024 traveling exhibition in Tokyo, Los Angeles and London, this gorgeous new monograph presents 100 of Michael Kenna’s most iconic photographs of the Japanese...
American photographer Mark Steinmetz photographed the people and environs of Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport between 2012 and 2019 as part of the High Museum of Art’s Picturing the South series,...
Jeffrey Conley's third monograph presents 60 photographs of the American West, printed in duotone on Japanese Kasadaka art paper and bound in linen. Jeffrey Conley specialises in creating traditional black and...
New York in the 70’s and 80’s was a volatile city, where everything was happening at once. For over two years, Jill Freedman joined two precincts of the NYPD as...
Born to an English father and a Peruvian mother, Ian Howorth inherited a fascinating and culturally rich background. Such an upbringing can be very liberal and mind-expanding, but a downside...
Henri Prestes’ first monograph We Were Born Before the Wind is an exploration of solitude and melancholy in the mysterious landscape of Portugal.The photographs Prestes took of his hometown, roaming in the...
In his series Back to the Arcade, Franck Bohbot’s mastery of color, and ability to frame a narrative is on full display. Through his lens, arcades open to the viewer like...
Polly Alderton is the ninth in an ongoing bi-monthly series publishing the work of emerging photographers. 'I make work around the family album. A compulsion really, to document everything in...
006 - Lauren Tepfer is the sixth in an ongoing collaboration of Setanta Books with Open Doors Gallery publishing the work of emerging photographers. 'Growing up with a creative mind...
Netflix and Chill is a new photobook by @now.a.magpie, exploring online dating culture and photography in today’s digital society. This work presents the online experience of Sarah, 23, featuring some of...
'Pinhole photography is perhaps the most basic form of photography. Essentially, all that is required is a light proof box with a tiny hole on one side and some photographic...
Peter O' Doherty is a Dublin based documentary photographer. By trade he is a videographer and since 2003 he has been capturing the changing city combining hid love of photography...
After Architekturfotografie, its latticed step sister Pompei, Pompeii and the xerox-classic Models Bianca Pedrina continues her artistic journey through architectural incongruities.The title Architekturfotografie is intentionally misleading, as the Swiss artist Bianca...
Portraits by Waiters contains images of Sveinn Fannar Jóhannsson posing in front of his own camera in different rooms, on different occasions. When reading the photos one will follow his...