Maxim Sarychau has been documenting the most extensive protests in Belarus' history following the presidential campaign. In October, he portrayed for the Wall Street Journal 5 Belarusians who openly stand against Alexander Lukashenko and documented the wave of police violence.
Read MoreAfter working on Trump's America during all his mandate, Photographer Mélanie Wenger has followed the US 2020 election campaign in one of the biggest battleground. Travelling around Pennsylvania, from Erie County, one of the last places Trump flipped in 2016, to Philadelphia, she followed supporters from both sides in a never so divided America.
Read MoreFor the past 3 years, Inland photographer Tim Franco based in Seoul, South Korea has been documenting the incredible tales of women and men fleeing the North Korean dictatorship in search of another life.
Read MorePhotographer Tadas Kazakevicius will be exhibiting his serie “Soon to be Gone” in extensive format at the Jimi x Arles International Photo Festival 2020. The festival will take place from November 27 to January 3, in Xiamen, China.
Read MoreMaxim Sarychau has been documenting the most extensive protests in Belarus' history following the presidential campaign. Authorities are conducting repression of incredible scale against society (>11.000 arrests in 2 month, multiple tortures and killings) and targeting journalists (>230 arrests).
Read MorePhotographer Tadas Kazakevicius was interviewed by Foto Kvartāls magazine. He takes us through his photographic process through 5 of his most meaningful images.
Read MoreWith his work 'Belarus' Legacy', photographer Jef Bonifacino is the laureate of the 2020 Grenoble Month of Photography. The story will be exhibited from Octobre 28 to November 29, 2020 at Maison de l'Image in Grenoble.
Read MoreMaxim Sarychau is a visual artist and photojournalist who lives and works in Minsk, Belarus. He focuses on long-term visual projects dealing with the topic of violence - of various forms and intensity - within both authoritarian power structures and traditional society. His work aims to address the political and human dimensions of collective memory and history. Maxim’s work has been widely shown in group and solo exhibitions including shows at the Latvian Museum of Photography(2020, Riga), Kasarna Karlin (2018, Prague) and CECH (2017, Minsk). He was published in Stern Crime, Die Zeit, Der Spiegel, Meduza, Courrier International, The Telegraph and Le Monde Diplomatique among others.
Read MoreDuring these uncertain COVID times, photographer Phyllis B. Dooney, along with twelve photographers, was asked to make photographs in response to ideas of invisibility in both private and public spaces. The resulting work, curated by Will Warasila, will be in an upcoming exhibition and zine for purchase.
Read MoreKhadija Farah is a documentary photographer based in Nairobi, Kenya. From climate change to women’s issues, she is passionate about stories which provide a ‘light bulb moment’ or challenge public discourse on a subject. Much of her work seeks to document the daily lives of people and the issues that affect them.
Read MoreBorn in 1990, Mathias Zwick is a French photographer based in Strasbourg and working regularly in Paris. He covers French news, creates photo stories and nourishes a passion for street photography.
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