In her thought-provoking photography series titled "Lithium Mining, Atacama Desert," London-based artist Catherine Hyland delves into the complex relationship between human intervention, landscape, and the global demand for lithium.
For thousands of years in the land of the rising sun, ama, which translates to sea woman in Japanese, free-dived into the sea to collect seafood and precious pearls.
Photographer Stefan Dotter and activist Sabrina Herzog have partnered with ERE Foundation to organize a print sale for the evacuation and resettlement of eight photographers from Afghanistan.
What is San Francisco known for? Tourists would say the Golden Gate Bridge, colourful painted ladies houses, and the joy-filled rides on quaint cable cars. Photographer Kelsey McClellan would say weirdly shaped trees and bushes.
In light of the tragic events unfolding in Afghanistan, a group of photographers have teamed up to run a photo print fundraiser for NGO hospitals and clinics in the country.
For his project entitled THAW, Lieber photographed the Arctic ice cap, a region few dare to venture. Besides the sub-zero temperatures, it is barren, incredibly expensive to travel, and definitely not for the faint of heart.
Simon Porte Jacquemus, one of the most influential fashion designers of today, recently published his second book titled IMAGES. Just as the name suggests, it’s full of eye-catching and aesthetic visuals.
Organized by British and UK-based photographers, Photographs for the Trussell Trust is a print sale fundraiser that will donate 100 percent of proceeds to the Trussell Trust.
In support of the patients and medical staff, a group of distinguished New York-based photographers have assembled to hold a print sale fundraiser where all proceeds are donated directly to the Elmhurst Hospital Center.
Setting Mind interviews Dara McGrath, a photographer who investigated and took images of over 80 sites in the United Kingdom that were potentially contaminated by the production, testing, storage and disposal of chemical and biological weapons.
Seeking to examine the decay of abandonment and the power of nature, photographer Gohar Dashti took images of abandoned homes in Iran that had been enveloped with greenery.
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