Showcase: Falling Into Place
Patricia Lay-Dorsey's intimate self-portraits reveal a woman living life as if it were a work of art.
View ArticleShowcase: See and Be Seen
Yes, it's a bad time for aspiring photojournalists. But it's not the worst of times. And David Alan Harvey is among those who are trying to make it better.
View ArticleTurning Point: Robert Caplin
The third post in a series on young photographers and their inspiration features Robert Caplin.
View ArticleTitled ‘Burn,’ but Printed on Paper
Having met with success online, David Alan Harvey was ready to gamble on a really risky medium: books.
View Article48 Years Up (and Down) at the Geographic
William Albert Allard didn't play by the rules. But he cobbled together a half century with National Geographic. David Alan Harvey explores how.
View ArticleWhat Does Mercy Look Like?
James Whitlow Delano sought an answer — many answers — and is raising money for hospice and palliative care in the process, as Niko Koppel reports.
View ArticleAt Christie’s, an Auction for Anton
James Foley, a video journalist, was with Anton Hammerl, a South African photographer, when Mr. Hammerl was killed by the forces of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi in Libya. Now he is part of a team working to...
View ArticleExploring African-American Fatherhood
A family secret set Zun Lee on a path to go beyond the simple stereotypes and explore the lives of African-American fathers. The results, he said, have been redemptive.
View ArticleGetting to Know You Better
We've updated our list of reviewers for our first New York Portfolio Review, brought to you by the Lens blog of The New York Times.
View ArticleLivin’ La Vida Rio
David Alan Harvey has documented Brazil many times before, but in "(based on a true story)," he nakedly reveals his thoughts and experiences in a tale of passion, mystery and danger.
View ArticleAt National Geographic, 125 Years of Showing Beauty and Tragedy
A sprawling exhibition of National Geographic photography displays images familiar and forgotten from the magazine's 125 years, while its curators wonder what's next.
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