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Life Along Boston’s Orange Line Before its Demolition

Life Along Boston’s Orange Line Before its Demolition

In the mid-1980s, Boston’s transportation authority scheduled part of the city’s elevated Orange Line for demolition. Photographer Jack Lueders-Booth spent 18 months photographing the communities along the Orange Line to create a record of those who lived there.By Robert E. Gerhardt

In his “true” second book, Belleville, Boivin homes in on a territory that is familiar to him, without trying to comment on it socially or even intellectually. Pure joy.By Brigitte Ollier

Northeast England has been home to some of the great visual chroniclers of post-industrial Britain. Sirkka-Liisa Konttinen is one of these photographers. Her newly rereleased book, Byker, is a warm but hard-edged record of a neighbourhood that is being demolished even as she captures her photographs.By Colin Pantall

The HCB Foundation proposes a new dialogue between the Mexican photographs of Helen Levitt (1913-2009) and those of Henri Cartier-Bresson (1908-2004).

STILL AVAILABLE IN OUR LAB

A History of Documentary Photography, Part II

FROM THE ARCHIVES

Having inherited an impressive collection of nearly 2,000 cameras, Federico B. launched the 99 Cameras Club: a project to share and promote this unique collection.By Michaël Naulin

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

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