Blog

Margarita Khatmullina: Injury

Says Margarita: At the end of winter, I broke my arm. A fracture of the hand was difficult, I was offered to perform an operation and implant a titanium plate. And although my case is far from the first, nevertheless it seemed that my body is a kind of object of scientific...

Tom Finke: Spaces Between

About Spaces Between says Tom: The concept and construction of personal space is highly variable, both individually and culturally. I am often struck by the ways in which boundaries are marked between one home and another in Japanese cities. The astonishing density of urban populations leaves little room for expansive...

Alessio Cabras: Euclyptus

Says Alessio: Like a foreign object, like a no fruit tree that comes from afar. A plant that grows up with massive roots which sets up into the society: human hands that imprison the rich land for expel it exhausted out. Sardinia is the most militarized zone in Europe: more of...

Betty Bogaert: The Howling Mountain

Says Betty: A Sunday in February in the local newspaper, the wolf is on the cover. In Savoy, the growing presence of this protected species is a subject of debate. I choose to follow the wolf’s trail, or rather those who speak about it : farmers, shepherds, hunters, park wardens,...

Luther Gerlach: Thomas Fire Burn

The 2017 Thomas Fire is the largest in California history, an extreme example of an increasingly powerful destructive and creative cycle endemic to the region. The burn came within a quarter mile of my home, and as the smoke cleared, I was struck by how it had abstracted the landscape,...

Interview with documentary photographer Giulio Di Sturco

Giulio Di Sturco (b.1979, Italy) is a visual artist based in London. He studied at the European Institute of Design and Visual Arts in Rome and then moved to India where he spent five years refining his visual vocabulary, working throughout much of Asia and Africa. His awards include three...

Jordanna Kalman: Little Romances

Says Jordanna: When considered as an object the photograph exists physically in the world, it belongs to someone; it gets held, it has weight, value. I’ve been interested in this concept for some time. It was this interest plus the recurrent use of my images online without my permission that...

Ahmed Gaber: The Faded River

The Nile Delta in Egypt sits at the end of the longest river in the world. It is home to almost half of the country’s population. the people who live there are mostly farmers and rely on the Nile for irrigation. However, population inflation, climate change, sea level rise, sewage...