• Blind
  • Posts
  • James Bidgood Dies At 88

James Bidgood Dies At 88

James Bidgood Dies At 88

OBITUARY

James Bidgood, Master of LGBTQ Photography, Dies At 88

James Bidgood, whose groundbreaking queer photographs and film influenced American art, died on Monday, January 31, 2022, from complications due to Covid-19. He was 88.

By Miss Rosen

EXHIBITION

Harold Feinstein: The Joy of Living

The final installment in a trilogy of exhibitions, “Life as it was” looks back at four decades of photography by American Harold Feinstein. This is an opportunity to immerse ourselves in a humane, genial body of work.

By Laure Etienne

DISCOVERY

How We See the World Through Our Phones

In a new series, artist Tabitha Soren captures the world as she sees it through her iPad, photographing the fingerprints that dot her screen in a pointed commentary on the relationships we have with technology—and not with each other.

By Christina Cacouris

FESTIVAL

PhotoBrussels Awakens

The first baby steps seem a distant memory as PhotoBrussels launches the sixth iteration of the festival. The event has become an institution, bringing together some forty venues and giving a fresh impetus to photography in a capital where the medium is still struggling for recognition.

By Clara Bastid

STILL AVAILABLE IN OUR LAB SECTION

MOVIE

Joakim Eskildsen, Nothing Special

After traveling the world to document the stories and the lives of others, Danish photographer Joakim Eskildsen is now telling his own story and that of the people around him in this 38-minutes film.By Meero Studio 

MOVIE

Kourtney Roy, Desperate Dreamer

In eccentric self-portraits, Kourtney Roy embodies atypical characters. She enjoys the world by using it as a film set, transforming reality into fiction. In this film, you will follow the photographer in Cancùn, in the footsteps of her latest project, The Tourist.By Meero Studio

   

FROM THE ARCHIVES

Rediscovered Stories From the Zambian Fine Art Studios

In 2018, photographer Sana Ginwalla visited Fine Art Studios in Lusaka, the capital of Zambia, to buy some film camera batteries. In the studio, she found cupboards full of neglected prints, slides and negatives

By Colin Pantall

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

Please send us your work at: