Two film photographers and their basset hound puppy explore Grand Teton and Glacier National Parks with eyes wide and amazed
Thinking about starting to shoot with film and making the transition from digital photography? Here are my 5 Tips for Shooting with Film!
After living in Berlin for some time now, this is what the city has taught me about analog photography.
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A thought-provoking blend of high fashion, art and culture brought to you by the creators of AnOther Magazine
A look back at British photographer Nigel Shafran’s work takes us from the mid-1980s, through the iconic magazine years of i-D and The Face, to a recent resurgence in his unusual approach to shooting fashion
Buenos Aires is cinematographer Christopher Doyle's visual and narrative diary of his participation in the making of Wong Kar Wai's film Happy Together.
Magnum's Martin Parr is a master photographer of post-war Britain. We look at how he shoots his colourful and vivid scenes of everyday life
Ernst Haas brought the post-war world to life with his pioneering colour film work...
Multiple jigsaws, almost completed, are laid out in the living room. On the sideboard, porcelain creatures jostle for space with family photos – a marriage scene, a smiling elderly couple, kids in the park. Dolls are piled high on a chair in the corner, arranged in a chaotic arc. White masks, like those from the Venice Carnival, are positioned across one wall. The wallpaper is a scene from a seaside town – spinning Ferris wheels, winding rollercoasters, fairground murals – yet the paper itself is pockmarked with holes and stains. Richard Billingham, who grew up in this environment, describes the room as “carnivalesque”. When he lived here, in Cradley Heath in the West Midlands, he did so with his mother Liz and, after she moved out, his father Ray. This jam of decorative stuff was all Liz. She had winding, flowering roots and flowers tattooed across her arms. She wore floral dresses and she smoked until the ashtrays overflowed. When Billingham was 10 years old, Ray was laid off from a job as a machinist. The family sold their home for two grand – a cash-in- hand job to a local conman – and moved here, to what was quaintly referred to as public housing. Ray, who until this point only drank in the pub, began his life as a committed alcoholic and a full-time hermit.
The French humanist movement of the 1930s changed photography for good. A new exhibition at Paris Photo showcases the greats, including Henri Cartier-Bresson, Willy Ronis, and Martine Franck
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In just four years Japanese photographer has established himself with stunning color street photography of Tokyo, from candid portraits to neon-cityscapes.