“The Cut is my Click”

Belgian artist Katrien de Blauwer’s book “The Photos She Doesn’t Show to Anyone” balances harmony and tension with the finesse of a tightrope walker.

Exploring the Devastating Effects of Police Killings on Mothers

Untitled #36, North Minneapolis, MN © Jon Henry

Photographer Jon Henry photographed mothers and sons using the pietà as a motif to explore the police killings of black men across the United States. Combining the resulting photographs with the words of the mothers who take part in the project, Henry works to show the killings affects the mothers who are often forgotten about in the greater conversation.

Auctus Animalis : A Visual/Musical Bestiary

Misty owl (Otus nebula). Able to generate a mist with hypnotic properties, intended to maintain the balance of the biotope on the island Auctus animalis © Vincent Fournier for the Swiss Life 4 Hands Prize 2022-2023

The photographer Vincent Fournier and the composer Sébastien Gaxie won the Swisslife 4 Hands Prize, bringing together two disciplines: photography and music. Their project Auctus Animalis is a photographic and musical adventure in the quest for celestial animals that aim for the stars.

LIFE: Photography Under the Skin

Astronaut John Glenn in a Mercury program pressure suit and helmet, Florida 1959. Ralph Morse ©The LIFE Picture Collection

For the second time in Europe, unpublished LIFE photographs are being brought out of the archives to be exhibited and auctioned in Paris. The sale and exhibition, entitled The Golden Years of LIFE, focuses on America’s golden age, from the end of the stock market crash in 1929 through the late 1960s. It is an opportunity to revisit the place of photography in the history of the magazine.

Preserving the Culture and Community of Houston’s Third Ward

Beautiful, Still © Colby Deal

In his new book Beautiful, Still photographer Colby Deal works to document and preserve the community of Houston’s 3rd Ward. The work is about seeing the community as a whole: no matter how the area and its population are portrayed, it is all beautiful.

Jean-Luc Godard, or the Revolution of Language and Image 

Jean Luc Godard in Paris in 1983. © Roveri / MP / Leemage

Jean-Luc Godard, legend of the French New Wave died on September 13, 2022, in Rolle, Switzerland, at the age of 91, leaving behind a revolutionary filmography and a laboratory of free creation that questioned the powers of the image, its political uses, while reinventing the language of film. Blind also looks back on his career in photographs.

Open-eyed: The Festival Images Vevey

Santa Barbara @ Diana Markosian

The 8th Images Vevey Biennial, the largest visual arts event in Switzerland, focuses on “living together.” True to its identity, it features monumental outdoor installations and seeks to strike a balance between contemporary art and photography.

William Klein: The Life of a Nonconformist Photographer

William Klein, Fondation Nationale de la Photographie, Lyon, 1978 © Jacques Revon

The American photographer, who became known for his street and fashion images, died peacefully on September 10 at the age of 96 in Paris, his beloved city. Blind traces the career of the man who helped revolutionize photography.

Jane Evelyn Atwood : Marginalized Humanity

Daily life in this seaside town that was once a tourist haven, the only place in Haiti that's still green with vegetation, but is filthy and poor, with no plumbing or electricity in a majority of the homes. Small girl dumps out the family garbage into the sea. Jeremie, Haiti, January, 2006 © Jane Evelyn Atwood

A retrospective at Château de Laréole (France) sheds new light on the career of this great Franco-American photographer whose monumental body of work probes the hidden worlds of prostitution, transsexuals, AIDS patients, women inmates, landmine victims, and more.

When Art and Fashion Collide

Goya Fashion: Mrs. Stanley Mortimer, Jr. and Mrs. Desmond Fitzgerald in Balenciaga hats, 1940 © Horst P. Horst

An exhibition at Staley-Wise Gallery in New York examines the link between painting, sculpture, and photography, as documented by some of history’s greatest fashion photographers.

Visa pour l’Image in the Shadow of Ukraine

Displaced persons who have fled fighting in the east are being served a meal at the Monastery of the Resurrection which comes under the Moscow Patriarchate. Lviv, Ukraine, March 11, 2022. © Lucas Barioulet for Le Monde

For thirty-four years, the international festival of photojournalism “Visa pour l’Image,” in Perpignan, has reflected the world’s upheavals. Ukraine is necessarily at the forefront of this 2022 reiteration, which is also attentive to other crises and which even manages from time to time to come up for air.

A New Season in Photography at Polyptyque Marseille

Yair, Série Siempre que estemos vivos nos veremos © Céline Croze, courtesy Galerie Sit Down

It felt good to be in Marseille, on a sunny day in late August. The city had just put on its back-to-school outfit; and this also means the return of the Art-O-Rama, Paréidolie, and Polyptyque art fairs, dedicated, respectively, to contemporary art, drawing, and photography. We walk through the Polyptyque, with a detour via the Thomas Mailaender exhibition at the Centre Photographique Marseille.

The Prime of Life

Lionel Jusseret

Photographer Lionel Jusseret spent six months immersed in the day-to-day life of retirement home.

Best Regards, Bernard Plossu

Bernard Plossu, Arizona, 1980 © Dave Ronan

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: Bernard Plossu, and an intimate journey across the landscape.

Ukrainian Refugees Continue to Forge New Lives in Slovakia

The Ukrainians who have come to Banská Štiavnica have found help in those who call the town home. Their journeys to Slovakia have not been easy, and the effects of the war have left sometimes invisible marks on those who have arrived. But with the help of the townspeople, they are working to settle down and create new, safe lives for themselves and their families.

Parents-Children and Vice Versa 

Two books of photography, one by a mother, Joan Albert (Family Photographs), who photographed her children, and the other by a son, Jean-Jacques Gonzales (Conversation tardive), who recounts the life of his parents via their family photos, provide a glimpse of the complexity and intensity of parent-child relationships. Joan Albert, a mother and photographer For […]

Bob Farese: A Sensory Walk

Bob Farese

In Am I Not Light, published by Lecturis, Bob Farese takes us on a journey into his interiority, letting us jolt along in the environment in which he moves about and with which he is confronted.

The Ping Pong Effect

In Italy, Cortona on the Move festival this year focuses on the photographer’s legitimacy and authorship, and on the different applications of photography outside of the fine-art and documentary fields.

When Women Take on the Arts

The 53rd Rencontres d’Arles tackle a much-avoided, even controversial, issue: the exhibition “A Feminist Avant-Garde” takes us back to the 1970s to examine the role of photography in the feminist artistic affirmation of the time.

Are DSLR Cameras Going Extinct? 

Amid rumors that Nikon is joining Canon in winding down development and production of DSLR cameras, a look back at the history and impact of the DLSR—and where it’s headed.

Young European Photographers, Episode 2: Sari (Finland)

Sari Soinien

In the second episode of the documentary series “Young European Photographers,” we meet Finnish artist Sari Soininen and her psychedelic perception of the world, deep in the forests of her childhood.  She follows her mistress like a shadow and her wild expression is one of the photographer’s most beautiful shots. Sari Soininen’s little dog sees […]

In Lausanne, Plateforme 10 Unites Visual Arts

Olivia Bee

Inaugurated on June 18, the new art center Plateforme 10 in Lausanne, Switzerland, brings together three museums devoted to photography, painting, and contemporary art. Their first themed exhibition focuses on the train.

Peter Lindbergh, The Authentic 

Peter Lindbergh.

“It should be the responsibility of modern photographers to free women, and ultimately everyone, from the tyranny of youth and perfection.” This says everything. Peter Lindbergh is not just another fashion photographer.  The great age of supermodels at the turn of the 1980s and 1990s—with Linda Evangelista, Estelle Lefébure, Karen Alexander and others on a […]

Trying to Preserve the History of One of LA’s Most Vibrant Neighborhoods

Emanuel Hahn

During the pandemic, Emanuel Hahn set out to photograph Los Angeles’ famed Koreatown as way to work out a creative rut, looking at how Covid-19 and gentrification were changing the area. But as he spent more time with the shopkeepers he met, the project became a way to create a record of the lives of the Korean immigrants who have made Koreatown what it is today.

Brazil, Fever, Parties & Carnivals

Vincent Rosenblatt

One of the most elegant covered passages in the center of Paris has made room for two Brazilian megacities, Rio de Janeiro and Belém, as they plunge into the splendor and fury of carnivalesque rites and festivities. Entitled “Fever”, Vincent Rosenblatt’s exhibition is on view at the Pierre Passebon Gallery. It offers an eye-popping parade […]

Ukrainian Refugees Look to Slovakia for a New Home

Ismail Ferdous

As the War in Ukraine continues, refugees continue to flee from the conflict into neighboring countries. In Slovakia, the Ukrainians who have come to the country work to integrate their lives with those of their new neighbors.

Blind’s Top 10 at Arles 2022 Book Awards

Maxence Rifflet - Nos prisons

The Rencontres de la Photographie d’Arles award 4 book prizes. Three are selected by the Rencontres team: the author’s book prize, the history book prize, and the photo-text prize. The fourth, Luma Foundation’s famous Dummy Book Award, recognizes an unpublished book project. Concurrently, here is our selection of the 10 best publications presented during the […]

Looking at Life After Conflict Through the Work of the International Criminal Court

Pete Muller

For 20 years, the International Criminal Court has been meeting with survivors of conflict, their families, and their communities to hear the stories of the worst crimes. Photographers Rena Effendi, Pete Muller, and Finbarr O’Reilly bring their work documenting some of the stories as witnessed by outreach staff in 5 countries to an exhibition at the headquarters of the United Nations in New York City. A special chapter on the Democratic Republic of the Congo is also part of the exhibition.