photographer

  • A Semi-transient Expert On Hobos

    Filmmaker and photographer Bill Daniel documents the graffiti that hobos write on freight trains. Do you do anything anywhere near as old-timey as that?

  • The Doodles Of War

    The child soldiers of Liberia have taken street art to another level. Tim Hetherington took these terrifying photos during the blood-drenched civil war over there a few years back.

  • Harry Benson

    Harry Benson has taken some of the most recognizable and iconic portraits of the 20th century.

  • Nobuyoshi Araki

    There lives in Japan a relentless monster who has released 450 photo books-and still continues to take photographs every day. His name is Nobuyoshi Araki.

  • Mary Ellen Mark

    Mary Ellen Mark holds down a double slot in the world of photography. Widely known for stark, unblinking photojournalism, she also maintains a separate career as a production portraitist for the movie industry.

  • Ashley Gilbertson

    War photographer Ashley Gilbertson's mindset in late 2003 could have been summed up thusly: "If you haven't experienced Iraq, you are a worthless piece of shit."

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  • Walter Pfeiffer

    Walter Pfeiffer has been chasing beauty for almost 40 years now, making pictures that are as much a product of his obsessions as of his precision.

  • El Hombre Arana

    In the fall of 2006 I was on the Morrissey Tour. I had been touring since March ‘06, traveling all over the world photographing his concerts and fans.

  • The Kids Were Alright

    These are photos from the fucked-up party days, from when Ryan first started taking pictures of all his crazy friends up to when he had his solo show at the Whitney Museum, which flung him like a wet young noodle into the boiling pot of the art world.

  • What The Hell Happened

    Rennie Ellis was an extraordinary photographer who took pictures from the centre of the scenes he was a part of for almost four decades.

  • Vice Fashion - Out Of The Closet

    The wardrobe of Ryan McGinley.

  • Finally Legal

    Well, what I realized was even faster than film was if you were super controversial and just living in the East Village. In the early 1980s, it was a lot easier to be controversial than it is now.