photojournalism
My Strange Winter with a Shaman in Kazakhstan
Photographer Denis Vejas documents the practices of one of the country's last Sufi dervishes.
We Spent 90 Minutes at 1,500 Feet with Artist J Henry Fair
Fair has made it his life's work to photograph industrial pollution from the air.
Photos from Inside a Decade of Protests in Israel and Palestine
A new photobook by photo-activist collective Activestills features ten years of photography documenting tension in Israel and Palestine, including protests the photographers were active in themselves.
The World’s Best Photojournalism Arrives in London
Take a sneak peek at the prizewinners of the 2016 World Press Photo Competition.
Photos of the Georgian Families Living Inside an Abandoned Military Hospital
25 years after the fall of the Soviet Union, many Georgians are struggling to survive in the new economy. In the outskirts of the capital, Tbilisi, over 150 families are forced by necessity to live in an abandoned military hospital.
Chaotic Photo Collages Capture Raw Emotion of Rome
Italian photojournalist Gabriele Stabile turns the gritty unextraordinary scenes of Rome, extraordinary, in his photo-collages.
Experience British Art with Artificial Intelligence Technologies
Tate Britain launched an AI program as a new way of viewing its collection.
Photojournalists Capture the Violence and Emotion of Venezuelan Protests
See the Venezuelan crisis firsthand in striking black and white photographs.
Portraits and Documentary Photos of the Ongoing War in Ukraine
Wiktoria Wojciechowska's photography records the ongoing effects of the war on Ukrainians, particularly young soldiers, and draws renewed attention to a conflict that seems to have been forgotten.
What It Looks Like When the Turkish Army Places Kurdish Communities Under Curfew
Miriam Stanke traveled to Van, Yüksekova, Silvan, Şırnak, and Nusaybin to meet some of the Kurds who had recently been confined in a curfew state by the Turkish government.
Documenting Post-Chavez Venezuela
"This work is about inequality," says photographer Natalie Keyssar, "and a level of tension and sometimes danger so powerful in daily life it's almost palpable."
Heartbreaking Photos from the Front Line of Burma's Rohingya Genocide
If these Rohingya people go to their nearest hospital, they fear they will be forcefully euthanized.