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When Photographers Alter Reality

When Photographers Alter Reality

THEME

When Photographers Alter Reality

Whether it's via extensive post-production work or unusual compositions, some photographers manage to make us doubt if what we are looking at is real, creating universes bordering on sci-fi and strangeness. 

Blind

 takes a look at three different alternative worlds.

By Charlotte Jean

EXHIBITION

Living Together in Former East Germany

The festival ImageSingulières, in Sète, France hosts until September 5, 2021 an exhibition of the German photographer Ute Mahler, which was to take place last year.

By Jonas Cuénin

EXHIBITION

Karine Laval’s Great Escape into Nature

When the lockdown hit, the photographer Karine Laval took to her garden, transforming it into an otherworldly landscape through her prismatic images.

By Christina Cacouris

EXHIBITION

Jean-Michel André: The Migrants' Journey

In his project titled "Borders," the photographer Jean-Michel André looks at the traces left by migrants and refugees across the lands they traveled through, paying a vibrant tribute to their journey.

By Sabyl Ghoussoub

STILL AVAILABLE IN OUR LAB SECTION

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, published in book form by André Frère.By Meero Studio

   

TUTORIAL

Street Photography in New York City, by Nina Berman

Nina Berman is a documentary photographer, filmmaker, author and educator. In this 4-chapter course, she 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

   

FROM THE ARCHIVE

Exploring the Relationship Between Keith Haring and Photography

Artist Cey Adams remembers Keith Haring as he was - a friend, colleague, and pivotal figure on the New York art scene in the 1980s - and explains how photography was a precious tool to record their lives.

By Miss Rosen

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

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