Celebrating Print
The Kraszna-Krausz Book Awards has announced the long and shortlist for the 35th edition of the award, championing the photobook in a digital age.
The Kraszna-Krausz Book Awards has announced the long and shortlist for the 35th edition of the award, championing the photobook in a digital age.
Screens are everywhere. How often do we notice them? Archie Brooks is a graduate from Leeds Arts University questioning this relationship.
How far do we need to be convinced that something is real? Discover three creatives making new illusory worlds and impossible landscapes.
“Photography plays a very important role in my life… like eating, walking or sleeping. There’s no difference.” A new Ren Hang show opens in Italy.
This weekend, Harvey takes over Aesthetica’s Instagram feed, sharing images which uncover cinematic moments in the everyday.
A new programme at London’s San Mei Gallery aims to raise questions about contemporary food culture – reclaiming “ugly” fruits and vegetables.
Maia Flora creates powerful moving image about community. ‘Turban Talks’ explores questions of race and family from the artist’s front room.
Get inspired to enter the Aesthetica Art Prize. We share five key pieces of advice to inform your submission to the international award.
John Baloyi has a distinct aesthetic, producing portraits through a surreal Afro-centric lens. He evokes alternative views of black expression.
Christo and Jeanne-Claude are remembered for wrapping the world’s landmarks in bold fabrics. A new exhibition opens at Paris’ Centre Pompidou.
A sense of urgency is prevalent in the works of this year’s graduating students at London College of Communication. These are agents of change.
In Dan Commons’ work, red flowers, shuttered windows and urban staircases are taken out of context, asking viewers to consider the narrative.
Anna Skahill’s current work takes an interest in the intersection between relationships, memory and the family presented through a variety of media.
Kaplan Urul’s series Orange is an expression of the individual, representing turmoil explored through the body language of its subject.
Emma Dunaud is a Paris based photographer. Her work is closely linked to psychology, with a therapeutic and psychoanalytical quality.
Andrew Little is a recent BA Photography graduate for University of the Arts London: London College of Communication.
Tami Aftab is a London based Photographer. Her work touches on subjects of intimacy, performance and playfulness through portraiture.
Rachel Gordon is a Scottish photographer. Lockdown enabled her to reassess her practice, resulting in the series The Fruit & The Flies.
Qiying Feng is a BA Photography graduate from the University of the Arts: London College of Communication.