magnum
The Polar Extremes of Communities Behind California's 'Redwood Curtain'
Underneath the grandeur of nature, the struggles of small-town life are found.
Portraits of the Paradoxical Chechen Republic
Photographer Olga Kravets documents modern life in Chechyna, a federal state of Russia, where Turkish-built skyscrapers tower over citizens and the government tortures young men if they show any sign of dissent.
Occupied Pleasures
These photos show the little nuggets of happiness and light that Palestinians experience while living under the harsh conditions of occupation in the West Bank.
Photos of the Most Vulnerable People in Bangladesh
Dhaka's pavement dwellers have few means to survive in a political, social, and economic environment that virtually ignores them.
Susan Meiselas & the Magnum Foundation Present Seven Emerging Photojournalists
The Magnum Foundation's mission to sustain independent work and artistic excellence is embodied in this collection of pictures by photographers like Poulomi Basu, Tanya Habjouqa, and Pete Pin.
Jérôme Sessini Photographs History's Greatest Losers
The Magnum photographer on fatalism and determinism.
Night Journeys in Sète
Each year, the photo festival Image Singulières invites a photographer to the French town of Sète to make a series of photographs. During my time there, I became curious about what was happening behind closed doors.
Welcome to the Photo Issue 2015
The artists in this issue work at the crossroads of photojournalism and art. Their approaches are diverse, but they share a knack for capturing the images that exist as resonant frequencies amid the cacophony.
It Is the Hottest Day of the Year and I Am Stuck in an Office Writing Content for You
Fuck this. Absolutely fuck this.
Abbas Photographs the Bullshit People Get Up to in the Name of God
The Iranian Magnum photographer on his first assignments, his own relationship with God, and why he thinks tourists are savages.
Bieke Depoorter Photographs Home in Faraway Places
The Magnum photographer got to know the small towns of Russia and the United States—one stranger's couch at a time.