Todd Antony photography
The Wellcome Photography Prize highlights the most pressing issues of our time, from mental health to COVID to climate change.
London-based photographer Todd Antony recently spent some time in Sun City, a retirement city boasting 37,000 residents situated near Phoenix, Arizona, where he came across The Sun City Poms. They were very happy to be photographed striking their best pose against the immaculate backdrop of their sunny paradise. Antony says on his blog that spending time with these ladies made him consider how the Americans view the aging process.
Todd Antony photography
Todd Antony photography. Photos shot for campaigns and personal projects, of people from around the world.
Inspired by movement, the photographer and athlete is driven by her investigations of the space between performance and the camera
London-based photographer Todd Antony recently spent some time in Sun City, a retirement city boasting 37,000 residents situated near Phoenix, Arizona, where he came across The Sun City Poms. They were very happy to be photographed striking their best pose against the immaculate backdrop of their sunny paradise. Antony says on his blog that spending time with these ladies made him consider how the Americans view the aging process.
Nur, 48, after make up. Indonesian transgender people are known as waria, a term which is a combination of two Indonesian words: “wanita,” which means woman, and “pria,” which means…
At the Punjab Institute of Mental Health in Lahore, Pakistan, reports Venice-based photographer Marylise Vigneau, Bollywood songs and melodies of devotion and religious lamentation ring out through the facility’s 1400 beds. Here, she encountered agony and heartache, but she also uncovered moments of gentleness and delight. During her visits over three years, the residents blew soap bubbles, traded smoked, and listened as one older man recited John Keats in English.
Photos of Portuguese women from the 50's by French photographer Jean Dieuzaide
Todd Antony photography
The Wellcome Photography Prize highlights the most pressing issues of our time, from mental health to COVID to climate change.
Les Rochers Fauves is the title of a photography book by Clement Chapillon which can be literally translated into "wild rocks". The book is a collection of Chapillon’s multiple visits to the Greek island of Amorgos in the past 20 years. Belonging to the group of Cyclades, Amorgos is considered to have a “brutal beauty” as some describe it, classifying it as one of the most picturesque of the entire archipelago. Chapillon’s project takes its title from a 1892 book La Grèce d’aujourd’hui written by archeologist Gaston Deschamps. The novel is a travelogue of the island describing its traditions, nature and people. The photographer shares Deschamps fascination with the landscape of the island. For his project, Chapillon selected fragments from the original book which resonated with his understanding of Amorgos and erased the ones which did not. Les Rochers Fauves traces the concept of mental and geographical isolation which he explores through the physical space of the island. Through the concept of isolation, the photographer seeks connections to time, the other, beliefs, and the imaginary.
Life in Motion reveals a side to Russia’s orphanages less reported. The project, led by photographer Ed Kashi, was the incentive of the NGO Happy Families, whose aim it was to utilize images taken by ten photography graduates to raise awareness towards the need for public access for the disabled in Russia, as well as the potential for an accessible adoption system.
Life in Motion reveals a side to Russia’s orphanages less reported. The project, led by photographer Ed Kashi, was the incentive of the NGO Happy Families, whose aim it was to utilize images taken by ten photography graduates to raise awareness towards the need for public access for the disabled in Russia, as well as the potential for an accessible adoption system.
Les Rochers Fauves is the title of a photography book by Clement Chapillon which can be literally translated into "wild rocks". The book is a collection of Chapillon’s multiple visits to the Greek island of Amorgos in the past 20 years. Belonging to the group of Cyclades, Amorgos is considered to have a “brutal beauty” as some describe it, classifying it as one of the most picturesque of the entire archipelago. Chapillon’s project takes its title from a 1892 book La Grèce d’aujourd’hui written by archeologist Gaston Deschamps. The novel is a travelogue of the island describing its traditions, nature and people. The photographer shares Deschamps fascination with the landscape of the island. For his project, Chapillon selected fragments from the original book which resonated with his understanding of Amorgos and erased the ones which did not. Les Rochers Fauves traces the concept of mental and geographical isolation which he explores through the physical space of the island. Through the concept of isolation, the photographer seeks connections to time, the other, beliefs, and the imaginary.
Kinship © Benedict Adu / Sunday School The rise of the digital age brought along with it a newer appreciation for photography, storytelling and other creative endeavors. Additionally, the growing presence…
Bob and Mary, Becky Wilkes’s parents, lived with her in her single-story home for a year. As Covid ravaged the world beyond their door, they built a world of their…
“I instantaneously knew that I wanted them to be my protagonists,” says Berlin-based photographer Marlena Waldthausen of Jorg and Rolf, twin brothers living at the Deutsches Taubblindenwerk Fischbeck, a village of about 120 people living with deaf-blindness. Without the use of sight and sound, they communicate with each other through touch. On that first day, they were making each other laugh by playing, pantomiming nibbling on one another’s fingers.
At the Punjab Institute of Mental Health in Lahore, Pakistan, reports Venice-based photographer Marylise Vigneau, Bollywood songs and melodies of devotion and religious lamentation ring out through the facility’s 1400 beds. Here, she encountered agony and heartache, but she also uncovered moments of gentleness and delight. During her visits over three years, the residents blew soap bubbles, traded smoked, and listened as one older man recited John Keats in English.
The Portrait of Humanity Vol.5 shortlist reflect defiance in times of division as artists capture the issues that draw us together
Kinship © Benedict Adu / Sunday School The rise of the digital age brought along with it a newer appreciation for photography, storytelling and other creative endeavors. Additionally, the growing presence…
Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Georgia suffered a severe economic downturn which has left over half the population unemployed.
A successful retoucher and commercial photographer, Alix Martinez never thought to focus her sights upon children until becoming a mother herself. Inspired by their energy, excitement and boundless imaginations, Martinez…
For Brooklyn-based photographer Nadia Sablin, many of her childhood memories took place in Russia. In the small village of Alekhovshchina, which lies five hours north of St. Petersburg where Sablin was born and raised before she moved to the States, reside her two aunties who still maintain the house that was originally built by their father (Sablin’s grandfather) in the early 1900's. Over seven consecutive summers, Sablin stayed with her aunties and began a project chronicling the lives and rituals of these two elderly, unmarried sisters with her lens. What unfolds in her photographs is a touching tale of sisterly love, familial bonds, and land as a means of survival.
When many of us go home for the holidays, it’s a given that our parents will walk us to the door and wave farewell. It’s a moment that we both take for granted as adults and cherish with the child that remains within us, a ritual that speaks both to the enduring affection of family and the melancholy of growing up. For Goodbye at the Door, Cleveland-based photographer Angelo Merendino captures his own parents at such times, and in so doing, he pays tribute to the universal bonds of home.
Bob and Mary, Becky Wilkes’s parents, lived with her in her single-story home for a year. As Covid ravaged the world beyond their door, they built a world of their…
Masters Athletics is an international organization of track and field athletes aged 35 and older. In yearly meets around the world, they compete against others within five-year age brackets, with the oldest group aged 99 and up. Photographer Angela Jimenez, a former heptathlete, was fascinated when she first encountered senior athletes competing at a track event. What she saw in these people compelled her to return again and again to document their unassuming strength and endurance in what would become her series Racing Age
Meet the devotees of the “The International Peace Mission Movement,” a group of followers to Father Divine, a figure they believe to be God. The movement began in Harlem during the 1930s and attracted thousands of followers, states Kristin Bedford, who spent five weeks living with and photographing the community of Father Divine. The movement’s abiding faith and dedication despite their dwindling numbers and aging followers captivated her attention to document their traditions. Bedford describes, “My visit felt like a special intersection of time, history, and devotion. I had the chance to experience their traditions before they fade away. With these photographs I hope to offer glimpses of a mysterious and enduring faith.”
It's the holiday season, which means cute Christmas content is probably all over your Instagram feed right now! I don't know about you, but I struggle to come up with cute poses, props and photo ideas on the spot. That's why I've gathered some festive inspo for you and created this Holiday Photo Shoot Guide to help you ace your photos this cheery season!
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After spending time in a little-known Brooklyn neighbourhood, East New York, Phyllis Dooney began a project on fatherhood.
Merry Christmas, everyone! Just a short and sweet post today to say that I love and appreciate EVERY SINGLE ONE of you that comes to this blog every day - I am more thankful for you than you'll ever know!!! I'll be taking this week off from blogging to enjoy some family time, and I'll
Masters Athletics is an international organization of track and field athletes aged 35 and older. In yearly meets around the world, they compete against others within five-year age brackets, with the oldest group aged 99 and up. Photographer Angela Jimenez, a former heptathlete, was fascinated when she first encountered senior athletes competing at a track event. What she saw in these people compelled her to return again and again to document their unassuming strength and endurance in what would become her series Racing Age