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Erwin Olaf, In Complete Freedom

The Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam presents Erwin Olaf – Freedom, the first major retrospective since the artist’s sudden passing in 2023.

Sunday November 9, 2025

Summary

The Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam presents Erwin Olaf – Freedom, the first major retrospective since the artist’s sudden passing in 2023. The exhibition sheds light on previously unseen works by the master of studio photography and visual staging.

By Michaël Naulin

Presented at the Planches Contact and Photo Days festivals in France, Marilia Destot’s series “Memoryscapes” brings together seascapes permeated by memory and emotion. Capturing mist, light, and movement, the photographer turns photography into a meditative space between reality and remembrance.

By Jonas Cuénin

This summer, Baden once again became the beating heart of environmental photography. From June 13 to October 12, 2025, the Austrian spa town hosted the seventh edition of Festival La Gacilly-Baden Photo, bringing together some of the world’s finest photographers in a celebration of art, awareness, and shared humanity.

By Blind Magazine

In the book Too Many Products too Much Pressure, photographer Janet Delaney follows her father through his last year as a beauty-product salesman, revealing a humorous and affectionate portrait of labor, family, and love.

By Gaia Squarci

From jazz clubs to the streets of New York, from Montreal’s shadows to Rome’s glowing nights, the self-taught photographer moved through half a century of images infused with curiosity, humanity, and quiet humor. On view in Paris until November 29, 2025, as part of the Photo Days festival.

By Jonas Cuénin

La Galerie Rouge in Paris presents “Regards au Cœur du Panama”, the first solo exhibition in France of Panamanian photographer Sandra Eleta, who has spent over five decades documenting the people and places of her country.

By Gaia Squarci

The new book Eye Dreaming brings together a vivid tapestry of works from a singular career that transformed the landscape of photography.

By Miss Rosen

Two books and one expanded edition of the photographs of Gordon Parks look at the work of the famed photographer from three decades of his career: the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s. Taken together, the books show that Parks’ humanistic commitment to exposing the effects of race and class in America never wavered.

By Robert E. Gerhardt

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

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