Eric Scaggiante - Venezia
I like to spend long walks in Venice, alone, with my camera and flash, shooting humans and other animals mainly, trying to catch the reality I see; sometimes I'm able to catch it, sometimes not, it's research.
Read MoreI like to spend long walks in Venice, alone, with my camera and flash, shooting humans and other animals mainly, trying to catch the reality I see; sometimes I'm able to catch it, sometimes not, it's research.
Read MoreUsing the research of his own family history and the arrangement of family materials–old photos, letters, video screenshots, interviews and surveys–as clues, Leslie Shang Zhefeng weaves together the experiences of four generations to intimately narrate Chinese family life throughout the modern centuries.
Read MoreAs a teen and young adult, I spent all my time inside my room. I always felt alone within these walls, alone when I was out, alone when I was with friends, just alone. Family was not a comfort, it was a cause for much of the stress, anxiety and mainly the sadness I felt.
Read MoreMidnight at Sixty-Four by Joshua McMillan is a study of midnight light in a northern town where the sun never sets.
Read MoreIn this project I explore the characteristic landscape of the Galician rivers, places far from human intervention.
Read MoreNorthernmost town in the United States. 320 miles above the Arctic Circle. The name translates to ‘place where snowy owls are hunted.’
Read MoreThey are fully inserted in any urban context, planted in the earth. By now most of us don't even notice their presence, those tall metal constructions that illuminate at night but remain awake during the day, watching over the whole territory.
Read MoreI am in constant agitation, stuck in an in-between. I want to move on but can’t I can’t quite get past this stuttering.
Read MoreIn her ongoing series, Jialin Yan poignantly confronts death and embraces the undercurrents of her uncle, grandfather and grandmother’s presence in her world which continues to flow.
Read MoreAlessandra Valletti explores the succession of time through fragmented images in her series I Don’t Remember Coming Home
Read MoreThe Russian North is an endless snow-white napkin, crumpled with hills of Khibiny mountains and giant snowdrifts. The treeless landscape here makes everything flat and all human manifestations seem to strive to overcome this flatness: striped pipes of factories soaring up into the sky, Soviet «copy-paste» apartment blocks and power line towers stick out of the ground, as if the rest of the map is still rendering.
Read More"When I'm old I want to be like that." talks about optimism, enthusiasm, enjoyment, doing the things you've always wanted to do and that it's never too late, even when you're 80 years old and your strength is failing. This project speaks of the fact that old age can be a new youth.
Read MorePhotographer Takumi Sogo reflects on how, when alongside each other, objects and moments from our daily lives somehow resemble a world different to our own.
Read MoreWhat changes do you see when you take an ordinary object that no one remembers and turn it into a photograph? I began photographing while thinking about this question. This is an accumulation of experimental daily live broadcasts.
Read MoreDavide Fecarotti contemplates man’s relation to nature’s ferocity as he explores the devastation of the Roya Valley.
Read MoreA Peoples’ identity processes are reaffirmed through the assimilation of its history and culture. As a Valencian I have always felt restless; I have the feeling of not belonging to this land despite feeling very close to it.
Read MoreShinnosuke Oshiro’s illusory photographs transcend reality to a dream-like state.
Read MoreTre Mesi is a photographic project developed in southern Italy, between the provinces of Naples, Salerno and Caserta. The reason I took these images was a need to marvel at everyday life, far from stereotypical creativity, straddling the line between physical travel and inner exploration.
Read More“This is a collection of photos I've loosely been calling "Anxiety and Other Contemporary Feelings" It's exploring the general state of anxiety, exhaustion, and release the world has been exhibiting over the past 2-3 years through literal and conceptual photos”
Read MoreThe photographs in Disorder by Borja Ballbé are a powerful account of reality, interpreted through loneliness, depression and anxiety. In the book, Borja Ballbé draws inspiration from the great American road photographers, like Walker Evans, Robert Frank, Stephen Shore or, their contemporary counterpart, Alec Soth.
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