The Photo Issue 2016
Photos from a Perpetual Road Trip Across America
Naomi Harris spent the better part of a year capturing America with a point-and-shoot film camera.
A Polish Photographer's Dark, Dreamlike Series Shows Her Daughter as She Grows Up
Magdalena Switek is known for her distinctive style: a brooding mixture of street and documentary photography, all black-and-white.
These Bright, Surreal Pictures Redefine Still-Life Photography
Jessica Pettway's art shows everyday objects in surreal arrangements, bent and contorted into bizarre, often unrecognizable forms.
Portraits of Australia’s African Migrants
Atong Atem's portrait photography explores the complicated sense of identity migrants often have, the idea of feeling suspended between two worlds and never fully belonging to either.
Photos of Zombies, Werewolves, and Puritans Made Using a 1950s Monster Makeup Guide
Sue de Beer's work is infused with a sense of the occult, something she attributes to growing up in Salem, Massachusetts.
Photographer Sandy Kim Documents Her Louche, Rock 'n' Roll Life
"There's at least one picture of my boobs in anything I put out," Sandy Kim said in an interview with 'PAPER.'
A Japanese Photographer Examines Identity Stereotypes
Eighteen-year-old Izumi Miyazaki cites a number of surrealists as her inspiration in her thoughtful, wry, and precise work on identity stereotypes, setting cultural clichés alongside grotesque or awkward elements.
Am I What You're Looking For?
Endia Beal's powerful photographs record young, educated black women who are about to enter the workforce for the first time.
Welcome to VICE Magazine's Fifteenth Annual Photo Issue
In an era where people often measure content by volume rather than quality, we like to think that this year's photo issue proves that good things still come to those who wait.
A Young Photographer's Intimate, Narrative Self-Portraiture
Cigarette stubs, oranges, an onion, and candy wrappers.
Lorna Simpson Examines African American Identity
In this series, Lorna Simpson took photos of black women from advertisements in old issues of Ebony and paired them with images from a 1931 textbook.