Émile Zola : A Father Hen

Émile Zola

The Musée d’Orsay showcases some twenty portraits the novelist-photographer Émile Zola made of his daughter and model, Denise.

How Photography Can Help Restore Confidence in Journalism

Felix Uribe

Since 2005, nearly 2200 newspapers across the United States have shuttered, and newspaper jobs have plummeted nearly 57%. Photojournalists have been hit hard by the cuts. But now a new business model is hoping to reverse the trend—and not just support photojournalism, but revive local media as well.

The Daily Lives of the Ukrainians Displaced by War

Tetyanax with her young daughter, in Chop. March 15, 2022 © Ismail Ferdous / Agence VU' for Blind

In the Zakarpattia Oblast region of Ukraine, to the far west of the country, lies the city of Chop. This railroad hub is an easy access to the borders with Hungary and Slovakia as those displaced by the war in the East flee to safety in Ukraine’s West and the NATO countries beyond the borders.

The Ukrainian Rail in the Dark

A Ukrainian controller walks on the platforms in the train station in Lviv, western Ukraine. © Rafael Yaghobzadeh

Trains in Ukraine are an indispensable means of transport for millions of refugees. The photographer Rafael Yaghobzadeh has documented the railway network in Ukraine during wartime — at night, when there are fewer wandering souls.

Carole Bellaïche: The Dwelling of Memory and Hope

Carole Bellaïche

If, as an aspiring actor, you are lucky enough to cross paths with the photographer Carole Bellaïche, she will build your portfolio, filling it with beautiful photos, and leave behind an aura of mystery.

Inside George Brown’s Bar

John Banasiak

In 1971, a young photographer/barkeep made an evocative series of photographs of the patrons of a working-class bar that still have much to say about the human condition—and the gentle art of making portraits.

People of Ukraine

© Ismail Ferdous / VU' for Blind

In the village of Kontsovo, near the Slovakian border, photographer Ismail Ferdous asked several displaced Ukrainians to pose on the stage of a theater in the colors of their country, collecting their stories at the same time.

Cryonics: Modern-day Mummification?

Stéphanie Solinas

The photographer Stéphanie Solinas delivers a poetic work that questions the boundaries between belief and science. Her photographs taken over San Francisco illustrate a dialogue with the founder of a cryonics company whose core business is based on the promise of eternal life. Solinas’s work is featured as part of the Fata Morgana festival at the Jeu de Paume, while her book Le soleil ni la mort is published by Delpire & Co.

The Cost And Power Of Women’s Bodies

Artwork by Lara Chahine

Golf Photo Plus in Dubai presents the groundbreaking exhibition Swallow This. Arab Women And Body Politics, to create a conversation about the most sacred and forbidden topic in the Middle East.

Phyllis Galembo’s Sacred Space

Phyllis Galembo

Phyllis Galembo, a New York-based photographer, has created portraits throughout Africa, Mexico and the Caribbean since the 1980s. Her vivid and detailed color images of ceremonial figures have appeared in six monographs. Haiti, a locale to which she has repeatedly returned, is the subject of her recent book, Sodo, Haiti 1997-2001.

Best Regards, Frank Horvat

Frank Horvat

They are heirs to a time in suspension, and their images continue to enrich the world history of photography and our own impatient eyes. Blind shares the memories of some magical encounters with these virtuosos of the camera, soloists in black & white or in color, artists faithful to gelatin silver photography or bewitched by digital technologies. Today: Frank Horvat and his manual to happiness.

When Photographers Go Virtual

Elise Aubisse

Hard-core gamers or neophytes, these three photographers have crossed the border between the real and the virtual to snatch pictures of a world with infinite possibilities: that of video games. Tackling questions of copyright and photography-specific techniques, they are a living proof that in-game photography has its place in art history.

Patrick Chauvel: “In War Photography, Some Brutality Must Be Shown”

Lebanon, 1984. A Christian Lebanese army tank fires on Muslim militias in downtown Beirut. A cat of undetermined religion flees the fighting © Patrick Chauvel

At 72, Patrick Chauvel covers the war in Ukraine for Paris-Match. A few hours before his departure, he welcomed Blind at his home to look back on his 50 years of war photography. Half a century of history told in an album published for the 30th anniversary of Reporters Without Borders, entitled 100 photos for freedom of the press.

Denis Brihat: An Inextinguishable Passion

As tenacious as he is passionate, Denis Brihat spent his life subverting darkroom practices to bring his visionary ideas to life. Le Bec en l’air publishes a new edition of his monograph Les métamorphoses de l’argentique and pays homage to 70 years of passionate creation.

A Cape Verde Drama in Chiaroscuro

Pedro Costa

Vitalina Varela: Caderno de Rogadem by Pedro Costa revisits the story of the lead actress of his eponymous film awarded the Golden Leopard in Locarno in 2019.

Edwin Torres Captures His Family’s Lives in the South Bronx

Edwin Torres

In his series “Towers: Holding On. Family Documentary Photographs” photographer Edwin Torres shares an intimate look at his family members’ lives which has taken on new meaning with the passing of his mother. While the photographs are specific to his family, he hopes that others can relate to the ups and downs of family life and see a relationship to their own family.

Rian Dundon and the Lost and Found Story of his Book Changsha

Changsha

Over six years, photographer Rian Dundon photographed life in the city of Changsha in central China. But upon the publishing of the resulting book in 2012, the publisher folded, leaving the fate of the undistributed books unknown for most of the next decade.

Depardon in Algeria

Raymond Depardon

The exhibition “Son œil dans ma main: Algérie 1961–2019” at the Institut du monde arabe in Paris presents Depardon’s views of Algeria accompanied by the words of Algerian writer Kamel Daoud.

The Day Bob Dylan Became Bob Dylan

American photographer Rowland Scherman photographed many of the iconic musical, cultural, and political events of the 1960s, including the Beatles’ first US concert, and Woodstock. In 1963, he covered the Newport Folk Festival, where musician Bob Dylan appeared for the first time, on stage with Joan Baez

The Lonka project : The Faces of Holocaust Survivors

Lonka Project

It’s been said that “to write poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric” insomuch as that even poetry — the first art — requires us to attempt to come to terms with the inexplicable. One might then assume that any art born of an attempt at interpretation of absolute evil is bound to fail. But what of […]

French Hip-Hop in Photography

The exhibition “Hip-hop 360: Gloire à l’art de rue”, on view at the Philharmonie de Paris, showcases the work of photographers closely linked with the movement.

Bill Brandt: A World Apart

Foam in Amsterdam showcases Bill Brandt, a singular artist, unparalleled in the history of the medium. The exhibition “The Beautiful and the Sinister” is a journey through a body of work that has weathered the test of time.

Unwriting Photobook History

The WSPU Union book © Collection Museum of London

In 2004,  The Photobook History Volume 1 was published. Written by photographer Martin Parr and author Gerry Badger, it led to a flurry of interest in the photobook. Hoistories of Soviet, Latin American, Chinese, Dutch, Japanese, Dutch, and Spanish photobooks were published in the years after. With a few exceptions (Enghelab Street, Hannah Darabi’s book […]