Beneath the Waves
Thirza Schaap’s sculptures are constructed with plastic collected on beaches, raising awareness of the urgent pollution crisis through visual juxtapositions.
Thirza Schaap’s sculptures are constructed with plastic collected on beaches, raising awareness of the urgent pollution crisis through visual juxtapositions.
Carter Baran captures surreal, hazy images that are lit by an eerie glow, making audiences pause and wonder: what’s going to happen next in the story?
A journey into the last old-growth forests on Vancouver Island’s west coast, trees that form a vast, yet tragically disappearing, web of life.
The portraits of Han Yang are imbued with deep emotion, drawing inspiration from abstraction, fashion, philosophy, posthumanism and surrealism.
Simplicity, detachment and symmetry are among the hallmarks of artist Maria Svarbova’s distinctive style, from the Swimming Pool series and beyond.
Photo-based artists from around the world are responding to the Anthropocene, a geological era defined by human activity and destruction.
Catch the Spirit at Brooklyn Museum champions a photographer who used the camera as a tool for empathy, activism and artistic innovation.
World Press Photo acknowledges the global photojournalists who invite viewers to step outside the news cycle and look more deeply the world.
Lisa Oppenheim’s exhibition seamlessly blends light, history and memory, offering an exploration of photographic transformation and perception.
Surveying the six bold creative voices at the heart of the two-day festival, whose multidisciplinary works deal with what could be, and what’s yet to come.
Gleeson Paulino is dedicated to highlighting the region’s breathtaking beauty, whilst shedding light on the social and environmental challenges it faces.
Stefanie Langenhoven’s dreamlike series explores the stereotypes surrounding red hair and navigates the realities of being a woman in the modern era.
These five exhibition bring identity to the fore, asking profound and important questions about family, nationality, community and personhood.
‘American Job’ draws upon more than 40 iconic photographers to explore the history, legacy and continued influence of the US Labour movement.
This year’s winners of the V&A Parasol Foundation Prize for Women in Photography explore the ways individuals and communities come together.
A new documentary explores the complex and nuanced relationship between photographer Joel Meyerowitz and his wife Maggie Barrett.
These five US exhibitions on display this spring showcase photographers who use the camera to hold power to account and bring injustices to light.
National Portrait Gallery showcases more than three decades of images from The Face Magazine, a publication which shaped British youth culture.
Tate Britain’s extensive display collates the defining moments of the 1980s, showcasing photography that reflects the era’s monumental social transformation.