Jiaxin Liang - Under the Lychee Tree
Jiaxin Liang’s Under the Lychee Tree confronts the human condition through themes related to memory, grieving, and the cycle of reincarnation.
Read MoreJiaxin Liang’s Under the Lychee Tree confronts the human condition through themes related to memory, grieving, and the cycle of reincarnation.
Read MoreYannis Konstantinos’ photographs deal with the ongoing narcissification of individuals in society and the resulting detachment from the inexplicable, Other.
Read MoreRose Clements’ Renaissance is a grasp at hope in the midst of a difficult year.
Read MorePhotographer Yu Heng Lim explores Tokyo’s spacial opportunities and intimate architectural design.
Read MoreMaarten Vromans explores the impact that people, nature, and weather have on urban development in Dutch cities.
Read MorePhotographer Naomi Davison alongside her girlfriend Saffron Liberty, celebrate pride in an unquestioned, liberated photo series.
Read MoreIn a Modern Decameron, Carmen Colombo is a visual storyteller of days spent together with her friends in the Peloponnese countryside.
Read MoreFelix Hahn’s photographs highlight the beauty in spontaneity and organic compilation.
Read MoreThrough capturing simple moments sustained in time and space, Nianzhang Liu’s photography traces the cultural fusion and de-regionalization created by the movement of people across cities.
Read MoreLucas Santo records the history of place in his hometown Recanto.
Read MoreThe "Transcend" series is a humble attempt to enter, and intentionally give a sense of stillness to the activity of one’s mind. The images are simple yet contain hidden messages directed at the subconscious of the viewers.
Read MorePhotography has a huge responsibility. It documents the aspirations, stories, and movements of society. Shifting the photographic gaze–breaking from the colonial and patriarchal eye and giving space for marginalized voices to document their histories–is what should be shown in the images we produce. However, to call for diversity and visual representation in the photo industry is not enough. To diversify our industries, we must, with intention, actively support BIPOC photographers. Here, we talk with Mark Clennon, Grace Rivera, and Emilynn Rose to celebrate Peerspace’s launch of their Space for Change program.
Read MorePhotography is the visual representation of what I see but also of what I smell. This concept has driven my need to photograph during last summer. When I was a child, I used to go on holiday with my family to Sardinia. Every time we arrived in an isolated and unspoiled beach, Titti, a friend of my father, told us children to breathe deeply and memorize those mediterranean smells. She said that during the winter months, the memory of these smells would be able to take us back to our past sunny summer.
Read MoreMarie-Lilien’s photographs can be understood as an interplay between a certain poetic fragility and a loud, colourful aesthetic of vibrant urban life.
Read MoreChristina Yang’s People from Tibet celebrates the beauty of other cultures and her joy in having been welcomed into experiencing and capturing the faces of those she met in Tibet.
Read MoreAnia Cywinska deeply trusts her intuition and likes to follow it in the creative process. The presented selection of images include a series of embroidered collages that were inspired by Andersen’s “Snow Queen.”
Read MoreSkaidrė Rudokaitė explores the beauty of awakening the sense of wonder. A Faint Drift in the Universe is a visual expression of detaching from the practicalities of life and suddenly seeing everything anew.
Read MoreThis ongoing series called No Fun Vancouver consists of the things I see in Vancouver that give me the fun, understanding, hope, and much-needed connection.
Read MoreLacy Wood’s photographs suspends us in pandemic-time through dreamy, sunlit portraits of women in NYC.
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