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How AI Imagery is Shaking Photojournalism (Meero EN)

How AI Imagery is Shaking Photojournalism

In this Op-ed, independent photography director and educator Amber Terranova discusses one of the most controversial AI imagery projects in recent weeks.

By Amber Terranova

The Rencontres de la Jeune Photographie Internationale in Niort, France, host a creative residency for seven emerging international artists and offer an extensive exhibition throughout the city.

By Iris Mandret

On the occasion of his exhibition Monsters at the Villa Pérochon in Niort, the photographer Joan Fontcuberta shares his perspectives on artificial intelligence, memory, and the future of photography.

By Iris Mandret

A photographer from Kobane, Syria, Serbest Salih arrived in southeastern Turkey running from the war. In a few years he started a darkroom and photo lab for displaced children, helping them “create beauty and joy out of the darkness of their past and present.”

Photographs by Sirkhane Darkroom

With this exhibition, curator Sacha Jenkins creates a luxuriously layered visual history of hip hop’s evolution and elevation on the world stage.

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FROM THE ARCHIVES

Hard-core gamers or neophytes, these three photographers have crossed the border between the real and the virtual to snatch pictures of a world with infinite possibilities: that of video games. Tackling questions of copyright and photography-specific techniques, they are a living proof that in-game photography has its place in art history.By Charlotte Jean

Blind financially supports the production of visual stories and invites all photographers to submit their portfolios.

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