Vibrant Cities
Positioning city architecture as a locus for social interaction, Fred Herzog’s bright images focus on public spaces and crowds of people.
Positioning city architecture as a locus for social interaction, Fred Herzog’s bright images focus on public spaces and crowds of people.
A selection of this season’s must-read publications respond to key contemporary themes of post-truth, media culture, race and gender.
Focusing on 10 key photographs from the 1950s and 1960s, a show reveals iconic architect Denise Scott Brown’s interdisciplinary lens.
MoMA, Focal Point Gallery and the current issue of Aesthetica look towards utopian ideals through architecture and photography.
The Other Art Fair’s Bristol edition is an international place for emerging creatives to showcase their works from around the world.
A show celebrates the legacy of influential fashion photographers, tracking the genre’s transformation into an art form.
Dutch multidisciplinary artist Erwin Olaf rewrites the conventions of fashion photography through highly stylised, affecting works.
Some things are not meant to be seen. But Trevor Paglen has made it his mission to highlight secret CIA prison sites, spy satellites and military installations.
Moving into July, new photography and moving-image exhibitions explore notions of selfhood, representation and globalisation.
ICP’s survey of an intergenerational group of women artists from the 1990s to today explores the self in its multiplicity rather than its singularity.
Documenting the world from above, a new exhibition offers new angles on the urban and natural environment,
Photographer Inge Morath documented 20th century culture in America and Europe with a wide-reaching lens.
Catherine Hyland’s images capture Essex’s modernist architecture, reflecting upon their position within the social landscape.
Two exhibitions at Michael Hoppen Gallery, London, celebrate the spontaneous and joyful images of Jacques Henri Lartigue.
Siegfried Hansen’s street photography is on display this summer as part of the 2018 Hamburg Triennial, covering the theme of Breaking Point.
The topic of editing, cropping and filtering, as well as the impact of digital circulation, is addressed in several exhibitions and publications this month.
Exhibitions open this summer document the fast-paced nature of the modern age by reflecting on urban and rural landscapes.
Looking to the past in order to to reflect upon the present, a new photobook by Matt Henry offers a revealing series of compositions.
Investigating spaces of transition, Ursula Schulz-Dornburg’s oeuvre documents borders and cultural sites to explore lost utopias.