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At the Porto Photography Biennial, A Necessary Interconnection

Until June 29, 2025, the Bienal’25 Fotografia do Porto is exhibiting some 50 artists in the heart of the Portuguese city. The edition is driven by a theme, Tomorrow/Today, as well as a desire to build strength through collaboration.

Thursday May 22, 2025

Summary

Until June 29, 2025, the Bienal’25 Fotografia do Porto is exhibiting some 50 artists in the heart of the Portuguese city. The edition is driven by a theme, Tomorrow/Today, as well as a desire to build strength through collaboration.

By Lou Tsatsas

Today, Laurent Ballesta explains to Blind the challenges of ocean preservation, his concerns, and the role of major NGOs in the field. Together with MPB, we're offering you the chance to win Laurent Ballesta’s iconic Nikon D5. Enter now.

By Jonas Cuénin

A book by Gael del Río and Luca Bani, Oddments reflects on the leftovers of darkroom processes, and the implicit decisions embedded in test strips, image fragments often considered meaningless.

By Gaia Squarci

Until May 31, the In Camera gallery in Paris brings together the works of Alexandra Catiere and Thomas Vandenberghe in an exhibition where emotion is imprinted in two-tone, black and white, between hanging flowers and brushed bodies. Two singular photographic writings, united by a certain taste for mystery, silence, and floral inspiration.

By Norah Auger

In her book “Carrusel de Melancolías”, Chilean photographer Leonora Vicuña offers a personal view of life at the edges of society between the late 1970s and early 1980s, years marked by Augusto Pinochet’s dictatorship.

By Gaia Squarci

Tseng Kwong Chi’s Iconic Portraits of Art Stars

Known for his self-portraits, the American photographer Tseng Kwong Chi (1950-1990) immortalized artists like Keith Haring, Jean-Michel Basquiat or Andy Warhol.

By Miss Rosen

An illustrated edition of Susan Sontag’s classic On Photography breathes new life into the essays by a woman who, with unflinching passion, showed the sometimes-decisive influence of photography on our society.

By Brigitte Ollier & Jonas Cuénin

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

Please send us your work at: [email protected]