Mary Ellen Mark, A Life Defending Humanity

This month, German publisher Steidl is releasing an exceptional book on the career of American photographer Mary Ellen Mark. For 60 years, she has worked to highlight the richness of our cultures and the diversity of our society.
A video interview with François Halard

In this second book devoted to artists’ studios, the photographer continues his exploration and opens the doors to the studios of mythical figures of art history such as Louise Bourgeois, Saul Leiter or Giorgio Morandi. Interview with François Halard.
The surprising architecture of Los Angeles

While the city of Los Angeles is currently undergoing heavy densification and transformation, the architects Caroline and Cyril Desroche are publishing a documentary book containing 1,300 photos in order to take stock of the city’s urban fabric. In it they deconstruct the hierarchies and analyze the city’s standards, with billboards and parking lots appearing on the same plane as the mythical stilt houses.
Regarding the Painful Memories of Others

How to represent violence? Through the work of three photographers, our columnist explores this complex question of photography.
ON THAT DAY, “A successful jailbreak” by Benjamin Hoffman

With our On That Day series, photographers are invited to take us behind the scenes of one of their photographs. Today, photographer Benjamin Hoffman relates his trip to Robben Island, South Africa.
Why does film photography continue to be so popular?

Over the past several years, film photography has been trending again, especially among those aged thirty and under. We take a closer look at this surge in popularity of silver grain over pixels, which has given a boost to a niche economy.
Taking your first steps in a darkroom

Now that you have all the keys in hand to take up film photography, you may decide to start developing your film at home. Here are some tips on getting started that will guide you through the various steps so you can see your images appear as negatives.
The magic of photo printing as told by Guillaume Geneste

One of the last ambassadors of traditional printing in Paris, Guillaume Geneste opened the doors of his photo lab to us on the occasion of the release of his book Le Tirage à mains nues [Printing with Bare Hands]. It is a love letter to the profession of printing and to photography.
Jérémie Villet: in search of the wolf

The photographer corrals a nice little gallery of animals going all the way back to his childhood. Aged 22, Jérémie Villet is about to publish his first book.
ON THAT DAY, “In the Land of the Kims” by Philippe Chancel

With our “On That Day” series, photographers are invited to take us behind the scenes of one of their photographs. Today, Philippe Chancel tells us about a compromised photo session in North Korea.
How photography has taken over Brussels during and post lockdown

1000 photos, 50 photographers, four weeks of speed assembly, one city-wide exhibition, and 174,000 visitors. Since June, the streets of Brussels have turned into outdoor exhibition halls and, here and there, Belgian photography has eclipsed billboards. The project is called EXI(S)T, and reminds us once again that culture is a site of resistance to ongoing crises.
A Powerful Portrait of Resistance and Resilience in New York City

The Museum of the City of New York presents “New York Responds,” an outdoor photography installation culled from more than 15,000 submissions made during the COVID-19 crisis and the Black Lives Movement protests.
Making the most out of your photography website

A website is a valuable digital tool that allows you to show your work to a large audience and to introduce yourself. Whether you’re creating your first photo website or looking to dive back into it to update it, here are some tips for making the most out of it.
Alejandra Laviada’s Geometric Trompe-l’oeil

Mexican artist Alejandra Laviada first trained as a painter before turning to photography. For years she wanted to combine painting with photography, and she started doing that recently. Here’s a look at some of her latest work.
ON THAT DAY – “When I turned 25” by Yan Morvan

With our series On that Day, photographers are invited to go behind the scenes of one of their photographs. Today, Yan Morvan recounts his beginnings as a photographer on an assignment in Lourdes.
Choosing Your Film Roll in 5 Steps

Film is a major element in the practice of analog photography. It is coated with light-sensitive silver gelatin emulsion that captures light allowing images to emerge, which will be developed in the laboratory and then printed or scanned. In this article, we outline a five-step process to help you pick the film that is right for you, depending on the desired type of picture, development, and rendering.
A short history of cameraless photography

In the history of photography, cameraless photography has always been relegated to the background. Too personal, too experimental, too strange, too iconoclastic. And yet, it is actually much older than camera photography! Praised by the Avant-garde artists, it is now a field of chemical, technological and philosophical exploration for contemporary artists, and it challenges our preconceived notions about photography.
INSIDE THE FRAME – Spotlight on herbaria

Just as cultural institutions are reopening their doors, Blind explores museum collections and takes a closer look at some historical photographs. Today, we focus on a cyanotype by the British photographer Anna Atkins which is part of the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.
ON THAT DAY – “Senegalese Magic” by Denis Rouvre

With our series On that Day, photographers are invited to go behind the scenes of one of their photographs. Today, photographer Denis Rouvre tells us about this long-awaited moment, on a beach in Senegal…
Photography and comics: Mohamed Ali by Abbas

Magnum Photos, in collaboration with Éditions Dupuis, publishes a graphic novel about the epic fight between Mohamed Ali and George Foreman which took place in 1974 in Kinshasa and was covered by the French-Iranian photojournalist Abbas. Comic book panels and photography: two art forms that go together beautifully.
Naïma Lecomte and the sheds of the Camargue

The photographer stumbled upon the atypical constructions of former workers located in the heart of the Camargue National Park, in the South of France. In a series that’s a cross between documentary work and a poetic stroll, she paints a nuanced portrait of these timeless habitats.
Arles 2020: Must-see exhibitions this summer

Synonymous with photography, Arles will be spending this summer without its Rencontres because of the coronavirus. Nonetheless, local cultural actors have taken up the challenge with a multidisciplinary program where the image holds the pride of place. We present a selection.
Dorothea Lange: Day Sleepers

MACK publishes a remarkable book that sheds fresh light on the work of the American photographer Dorothea Lange. Previously unseen images often show slumbering subjects.
Patrick Bienert : “Georgia is a special place”

In his latest book published by KAHL, the German photographer Patrick Bienert explores the weight of the former USSR on Georgian society. An invitation to discover this little-known country in full mutation but which seems as if suspended in time.
CIRCULATION(S) 2020 – “To bear witness to this persistent danger” by Margaux Senlis

With her UXO series, the photographer explores the danger of explosives left over from the Vietnam War. Residents of non-cleared areas continue to face the threat of being injured or killed by an explosion. Margaux Senlis traveled to Vietnam, as well as to Laos and Cambodia, to embark on a photographic investigation exhibited as part of the Circulation (s) festival in Paris.
Jamel Shabazz’s intimate pictures of the New York subway

Over the past 40 years, Jamel Shabazz has created a singular archive of New York life on the move, finding intimate moments of beauty and humanity in the most unlikely of places: the public transit system.
Art Paris Art Fair 2020: the stories of Elsa & Johanna

Showcased by the gallery La Forest Divonne at the Paris Art Fair – online until the end of June – Elsa & Johanna have mastered the art of storytelling.
Climate change under Trump’s presidency

In Trump Revolution: Climate Crisis, the second in the Bronx Documentary Center’s series exploring the impact of the Presidency of Donald Trump, curators Michael Kamber and Cynthia Rivera bring together the work of photographers Stacy Kranitz, Kadir van Lohuizen, Yuri Kozyrev, Katie Orlinsky, Bryan Thomas, Marcus Yam in a harrowing exploration of the impact of White House policy on the environment.
ON THAT DAY, “Tanger” by Marco Barbon

With On That Day, photographers are invited to tell the story behind one of their photographs. Today, photographer Marco Barbon tells the story of a stop at the Phoenician tomb in Tangier.
Andrea Savorani Neri, “I’ve always been fascinated by southern Italy.”

It was at the wheel of his car and equipped with his large-format camera that Andrea Savorani Neri, an Italian photographer, decided to travel through southern Italy: Campania, Apulia, Basilicata, Calabria, and more. Her black and white wandering took him from the places of his childhood to the most remote corners of this ancient and unchanging Italy.
Art Paris Art Fair 2020: Edouard Taufenbach’s cut-out pictures

Edouard Taufenbach is showcased by the Galerie Binome at Art Paris – online until the end of June – alongside Douglas Mandry, Laurence Aëgerter and Anaïs Boudot. We focus on this singular artist who uses images as his raw material.
Stephen Shore’s Forgotten Archives

Never-before-seen 35mm photographs from Stephen Shore’s groundbreaking series documenting “main street” America during the 1970s.
Art Paris Art Fair 2020 goes digital

Placing emphasis on discovery, which has always been a hallmark of this general-interest art fair, the 22nd installment of Art Paris breaks new ground with a virtual edition designed for the era of the coronavirus. The program features 150 modern and contemporary art galleries from twenty countries.
Gideon Mendel: climate change photographer

Portrait of a photographer who used his experience in social issues to document climate change.
A video interview with Claudia Andujar

The 88-year-old photographer has become the “mother” and voice of the Yanomami Indians of the Amazon forest she has spent her life photographing. This key figure in documentary photography has her work exhibited at the Fondation Cartier in Paris. Interview with Claudia Andujar.
INSIDE THE FRAME: The eye and the blade

On the occasion of the exhibition Erwin Wurm: Photographs at the Maison Européenne de la Photographie (suspended due to the Covid-19 epidemic), Blind takes a closer look at this Austrian artist of the absurd and celebrates his photographic work.
Marie Bovo: nocturnal flamboyance

The photographer’s work on the sleeping world and that which is invisible is currently on view at the Henri Cartier-Bresson Foundation in Paris.
Patrick Wack: An ideal confinement

The French photographer Patrick Wack created the series Landscapes of No Confinement in his adoptive Germany. His images capture a strange feeling of freedom right when half of the planet’s inhabitants are under lockdown in their homes.
Contact High: the history of hip-hop in photography

The International Center of Photography in New York inaugurates its new Lower East Side location with CONTACT HIGH: A Visual History of Hip-Hop. The exhibition, based on Vikki Tobak’s eponymous book published in 2018, documents the explosion of hip-hop in the United States through a series of iconic portraits. These original images break with the stereotypes of a raucous, disorderly culture.
How to Make your Own DIY Photo Book in 6 Steps

Now that you’ve sorted your digital photos, it’s time to move on to your print photos. Maybe they’re still in their envelopes or neatly gathered in traditional albums: either way, it might be time to do something else with them, maybe even organize a fun and creative family activity, for example, to immerse yourself in memories or to make perfect homemade presents for future use. Here are 6 tips to make a DIY photo book.
ON THAT DAY, “This the Summer of 2015” by Julien Magre

With On That Day, photographers are invited to tell the story behind one of their photographs. Today, photographer Julien Magre remembers a Swedish summer.
PORTFOLIO – Lucia Bartl: Keeping distance

In her series The Distance Projekt, the photographer Lucia Bartl addresses the impact of the lockdown on the lives of her loved ones. Her tender images are taken at a certain distance from the subject, as prescribed.
The Rencontres de la Photographie d’Arles is cancelled

France’s annual festival and the world’s largest photography event announces its cancellation in response to the health crisis which has also impacted other summer events, including the Festival d’Avignon.
“It will live for centuries to come”: Gilbert Garcin’s poetic universe as seen by one of his printers

A native of La Ciotat, the photographer Gilbert Garcin passed away last Saturday, April 18, at the age of 90. He left behind a formidable body of philosophical, surrealist work. Guillaume Geneste, one of his printers, talks to us about this “grandfather of photography” who captured audiences in France and abroad.
How to Organize your Photos: 6 Easy Tips

There are many different ways to keep busy during this unique time period, such as sorting the countless files lying around on your computer, memory card or hard drive, including organizing photos. Photos are usually among the most space-consuming ones, they’re saved over and over again, and we often forget about them for years.
So the time has finally come to go through your images and sort them out. If you want to know how to organize your photos, following are some tips to help you do this faster and more efficiently.