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Rosalind Fox Solomon, Photographer of Human Mystery, Dies at 95

The American leaves behind a singular body of work, constructed far removed from traditional schools and trends.

Thursday June 26, 2025

Summary

The American leaves behind a singular body of work, constructed far removed from traditional schools and trends. From the heartland of America to the rituals of South Africa, from portraits of masked men to faces scarred by the AIDS epidemic, she captured the silence, confusion, and complexity contained in the image.

By Jonas Cuénin

Combining curation of new works and ambitious scientific experiments, “The World According to AI” at the Jeu de Paume in Paris critically explores the challenges of this technology in our contemporary imagination.

By Guénola Pellen

The Phoenix Art Museum explores the use of comedy throughout the history of photography with the new exhibition “Funny Business: Photography and Humor”. The exhibition explores the ways in which art and humor can often be the best remedy for a challenging world.

By Robert E. Gerhardt

Between old stones and new forms, the sixth edition of the Art and Heritage Festival in the Perche region, in France, weaves a sensitive thread between memory, matter, and image. Three artists—Gwennaëlle de Carbonnières, Juliette Agnel, and Mathilde Eudes—bring the invisible to life in places steeped in history.

By Jonas Cuénin

At Palazzo delle Esposizioni in Rome, a retrospective of Mario Giacomelli commemorates the centenary of his birth, tracing the distinctive elements that define one of Italy’s most visionary photographers.

By Gaia Squarci

The exhibition “Poisoned Futures?” brings together the work of Laura El-Tantawy, Gulshan Khan, and Lisl Ponger, three women photographers who confront the global realities of climate change, justice, and survival.

By Gaia Squarci

A few words for Magali Jauffret, a journalist at French historical newspaper L’Humanité, who passed away on the eve of summer.

By Brigitte Ollier

In 2021, Stephen Shore’s publication, Steel Town, released by MACK, depicted the fragility of the region in the United States known as the Rust Belt, devastated by the closing of steel mills in the 1970s.

By Brigitte Ollier & Jonas Cuénin

Destination Sudan, accompanied by photographer Claude Iverné, who in 2005 founded, a not-for-profit that is both a photo agency and a library with a collection of more than 20,000 photos, books, films, and other documents . Objective: the conservation and dissemination of this little-known chapter in the history of African photography.

By Sophie Bernard

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

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