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Best Regards, Samuel Fosso
Best Regards, Samuel Fosso
EXHIBITION
Best Regards, Samuel Fosso
They are heirs to a time in suspension, and their images continue to enrich the world history of photography and our own impatient eyes.
Blind
shares the memories of some magical encounters with these virtuosos of the camera, soloists in black & white or in color, artists faithful to gelatin silver photography or bewitched by digital technologies. Today: Samuel Fosso, the art of multiplicity.
By Brigitte Ollier
EXHIBITION
How Women Changed Street Photography
A new exhibit showcases the development of street photography across the 20th century, and how women came to define it.
By Christina Cacouris
BOOK
The Daily Life of Ambulance Drivers in 1990s Ukraine
Pharmakon / Ambulance 1994–1995
offers a gritty look at ambulance drivers’ sordid everyday life in Luhansk, Ukraine.
By Sabyl Ghoussoub
BOOK
Matt Black Documents the Geography of Poverty in America
For six years, and over 100,000 Miles through 46 States, Matt Black crisscrossed the United States by car and bus looking at America while recording the lives of rural and working-class Americans living in poverty in the richest country in the world.
By Robert E. Gerhardt
STILL AVAILABLE IN OUR LAB SECTION
TUTORIAL
Street Photography in New York City, by Nina Berman
In this 4-chapter course, photographer Nina Berman, from NOOR, will give you her advice on how to roam the streets of New York, and take advantage of the luminous beams that spread between its buildings.By NOOR Images
TUTORIAL
Using the Smartphone for Storytelling, by Jon Lowenstein
In this 4-chapter course, Jon Lowenstein from NOOR will give you his advice on using your smartphone to create visual stories. Watch the entire class below, choose the chapters in the upper left corner, and the subtitles in the lower right corner.By NOOR Images
FROM THE ARCHIVES
Living Through New York’s Dance Mania
New York City is among the best places in the world to party. As its nightlife industry is plagued by a pandemic, photographer Gaia Squarci reflects on the alternative ways New Yorkers found to still explore the freedom that only dance can offer.
By Gaia Squarci
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