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Diane Arbus’ Luminous Return to New York

Housed in the Park Avenue Armory, “Diane Arbus: Constellation” has found a temporary home. On view through August 17, 2025, the exhibition invites visitors to step into the timeless world Arbus captured through her lens.

Thursday July 24, 2025

Summary

Housed in the Park Avenue Armory, “Diane Arbus: Constellation” has found a temporary home. On view through August 17, 2025, the exhibition invites visitors to step into the timeless world Arbus captured through her lens.

By Itzel Robles Sandoval

The exhibition “Marie-Laure de Decker, a Look at Current Events” at the Maison Européenne de la Photographie in Paris highlights the work of this photographer, who died in 2023.

By Guénola Pellen

In Paris, there are streets and alleys, facades and faces. And then there is Rue Daguerre, not as an address but as a world, a studio, a playground for the curious eye of Agnès Varda. The Musée Carnavalet is dedicating a surprising exhibition to the exhibition, which runs until August 24, 2025: “The Paris of Agnès Varda, here and there,” accompanied by a book.

By Norah Auger

In his book entitled “Californian Wildflowers”, South African photographer Pieter Hugo turns his attention toward the unhoused communities of San Francisco’s Tenderloin and Los Angeles’s Skid Row.

By Gaia Squarci

It took 20 years for this exhibition to see the light of day. Between an aborted first meeting—an email never received—and a recent, almost romantic reunion. This happy coincidence gives the exhibition its title: “20 Years Later…,” presented at Galerie H in Paris. A selective, almost intimate retrospective, which looks back on two decades of photography, combining staging, social poetry, and exploration of the feminine.

By Blind Magazine

Yancey Richardson Gallery’s exhibition « Celebrating 30 Years » brings together all of the gallery’s artists and estates, fostering a dialogue of affinities across diverse practices.

By Gaia Squarci

Photobooks have been for more than a century a powerful medium for visual storytelling, offering an intimate, tactile experience that goes beyond individual photographs. They serve as both artistic expressions and cultural artifacts, encapsulating the zeitgeist of their era while pushing the boundaries of photography as an art form. From poignant social commentaries to abstract explorations of light and form, these books have shaped the trajectory of photographic history.

By Blind Magazine

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

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