Tag: street photography

Street photography, a genre of photography that records everyday life in a public place. The very publicness of the setting enables the photographer to take candid pictures of strangers, often without their knowledge. Street photographers do not necessarily have a social purpose in mind, but they prefer to isolate and capture moments which might otherwise go unnoticed.

  • The Best Women Street Photographers of All Time

    The Best Women Street Photographers of All Time

    The Best Women Street Photographers of All Time

    Street Photography is one of the most challenging and exciting genres of photography. Sometimes when we see a photo, it gets into our mind and remains eternal for life. This could be moments of sorrow and pain, a disaster happening in the world, usual human interaction in our society, or even a moment of everyday life.
    Having awareness of photography history and the famous actors of that history will definitely make you a better photographer. If you are trying to capture perfect photographs, knowing the masters of photography will show you what makes a photograph perfect.
    In this article, we will introduce some of impressive master women photographers in this genre.

    Stay with us.

    Berenice Abbott

    Berenice Alice Abbott (July 17, 1898 – December 9, 1991) was an American photographer. Abbott’s work often focused more on cityscapes, social documentary and street photography. Her introduction to photography came when she made contact with the famed Surrealist Man Ray, who hired her as a darkroom assistant in 1923. It was in 1925 at the Man Ray Studio that Abbott first saw photographs by Eugène Atget.

    In 1929, Abbot began documenting the city in the manner of her of one of her major influences Eugène Atget. The impact of Atget’s photographs on Abbott was immediate: “There was a sudden flash of recognition – the shock of realism unadorned.” Abbott was part of the straight photography movement which stressed the importance of photographs being unmanipulated in both subject matter and developing processes. Today, Abbott’s photographs are held in the collections of The Museum of Modern Art in New York, the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles, and the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, among others.

    Quotes:

    “The challenge for me has first been to see things as they are, whether a portrait, a city street, or a bouncing ball. In a word, I have tried to be objective. What I mean by objectivity is not the objectivity of a machine, but of a sensible human being with the mystery of personal selection at the heart of it. The second challenge has been to impose order onto the things seen and to supply the visual context and the intellectual framework – that to me is the art of photography.”

    Diane Arbus

    Diane Arbus (March 14, 1923, July 26, 1971). She is one of the most original and influential artists of the twentieth century. She studied photography with Berenice Abbott, Alexey Brodovitch, and Lisette Model and had her first published photographs appear in Esquire in 1960. In 1963 and 1966 she was awarded John Simon Guggenheim Fellowships and was one of three photographers whose work was the focus of New Documents, John Szarkowski’s legendary exhibition at The Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1967. Arbus’s depictions of couples, children, female impersonators, nudists, New York City pedestrians, suburban families, circus performers, and celebrities, among others, span the breadth of the postwar American social sphere and constitute a diverse and singularly compelling portrait of humanity.

    Quote:

    “Freaks was a thing I photographed a lot. It was one of the first things I photographed, and it had a terrific kind of excitement for me. I just used to adore them. I still do adore some of them.”

    Dorothea Lange

    Dorothea Lange (May 26, 1895 – October 11, 1965) was an American documentary photographer and photojournalist. Lange’s photography focused more on capturing the struggles and realities of everyday life, often inrural settings or migrant camps, rather than the urban environments commonly associated with street photography. She studied photography at Columbia University in New York City under Clarence H. White, a member of the Photo-Secession group. She photographed endow her work with unforgettable power.

    FSA director Roy Stryker considered her most famous portrait, Migrant Mother, Nipomo, California (1936), to be the iconic representation of the agency’s agenda. The work now hangs in the Library of Congress. In 1940, Lange became the first woman awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in photography. In 1953–54 she worked with Edward Steichen on “The Family of Man,” an exhibition organized by the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York in 1955. Steichen included several of her photographs in the show. Over the next 10 years she traveled the world, photographically documenting countries throughout Asia, notably South Asia, the Middle East, and South America. She produced other work, including the images of home and family life published in American Country Woman (1964).

    Quote:

    “The camera is an instrument that teaches people how to see without a camera.”

    Esther Bubley

    Esther Bubley (February 16, 1921 – March 16, 1998) was an American photographer. Bubley’s photography often included street scenes and urban settings. Her work captured the broader spectrum of human experience, encompassing both public and private moments in diverse environments. Having developed an interest in photography in high school, Bubley received her big break in 1942, when she was hired as a darkroom assistant for Roy Stryker, the famed head of the photographic unit of the Office of War Information (OWI) in Washington, D.C. With Stryker’s guidance, Bubley embarked on her first assignments documenting wartime in the nation’s capital.

    She worked for several agencies of the American government and her work also featured in several news and photographic magazines. She was also a “people photographer” with an uncanny ability to achieve intimacy withher subjects. In 1955, Steichen included her work in his monumental The Family of Man exhibition. Bubley was a superb photographer, capable of creating striking modernist patterns in black and white and color under technically challenging conditions.

    Quote:

    “Put me down with people, and it’s just overwhelming,”

    Evelyn Hofer

    Evelyn Hofer (January 21, 1922 – November 2, 2009) was a German-American documentary photographer. Hofer’s work has influenced such photographers as Thomas Struth, Joel Sternfeld, Adam Bartos, Rineke Dijkstra, Judith Joy Ross, and Alex Soth. A street photographer of a different stripe, Hofer’s street pictures convey the artist’s concern with sociological connections and offer a pointed look at society and its conditions. Her trades-people and toffs, her families and social groups are more than just intimate portraits – they epitomize the possibilities and restrictions of the human condition. Hofer’s studies covered everything from photographic technique to art theory. She didn’t just learn composition and the underlying theories of aesthetics, she also learned the chemistry involved in producing prints. Beginning in the early 1960s she became one of the first fine art photographers to adopt the use of color film and the complicated dye transfer printing process as a regular practice.

    Throughout her long career, Hofer continued to shoot in both color and black and white – determining which was the more apt for the picture at hand.In the middle 1950s Hofer’s career took an important turn when the writer Mary McCarthy asked her to provide the photographs for The Stones of Florence, a literary exploration of the history and culture of that city. Over the next forty years Hofer collaborated with writers including V.S. Pritchett and Jan (James) Morris to produce books on Spain, Dublin, New York City, London, Paris, Switzerland, and Washington, D.C. in which she mixed portraits and land or cityscape. Hofer’s goal was to go beyond documentary photography to create a subjective interpretation of the world, conveying both the spirit of the time and a timeless message.

    Quote:

    “One reason I like to work with a big camera is that I don’t like to spy on people…I respect them and I want them to respect what we are doing together.”

    Helen Levitt

    Helen Levitt (August 31, 1913 – March 29, 2009) was an American photographer and cinematographer. She was particularly noted for her iconic street photography around New York City and most well known for taking pictures of children playing in the streets. She began photography when she was eighteen and attended many classes and events hosted by Manhattan Film and Photography League. Inspired by earlier masters such as Walker Evans and Henri Cartier-Bresson, she took her 35-milimeter camera to the streets, intimately capturing the daily activities of women, children, and minority communities. She became intrigued with the transitory chalk drawings that were part of the New York children’s street culture of the time. She began to photograph these chalk drawings, as well as the children who made them for her own creative assignment.

    She also explored the uncanny elements of the everyday, often capturing people in strange poses alongside surreal juxtapositions of people, places, and things. The New York Times described her images as “fleeting moments of surpassing lyricism, mystery, and quiet drama.” Levitt was one of the early pioneers of colour street photography and one of the first photographers to exhibit her colour work in 1974. In 1959 and 1960, she received two grants from the Guggenheim Foundation for her pioneering work in color photography.

    Quotes:

    “It would be mistaken to suppose that any of the best photography is come at by intellection; it is like all art, essentially the result of an intuitive process, drawing on all that the artist is rather than on anything he thinks, far less theorizes about.

    “I go where there’s a lot of activity. Children used to be outside. Now the streets are empty. People are indoors looking at television or something.”

    Ilse Bing

    Ilse Bing (23 March 1899 – 10 March 1998) German avant-garde photographer. She was a pioneering figure in the genre, known for her innovative use of the camera to capture urban life in cities such as Paris, Frankfurt, and New York during the early to mid-20th century. Bing’s work was often focused on capturing the energy, movement, and everyday scenes of city streets, using light and shadow to create dynamic compositions. Bing’s street photography was characterized by her ability to capture fleeting moments and to convey a sense of atmosphere and emotion. She experimented with various techniques, including using reflections, shadows, and unusual angles, to create visually striking images that provided unique perspectives on urban life.

    In addition to her street photography, Bing also worked as a photojournalist and fashion photographer, further showcasing her versatility and skill behind the camera. Her contributions to street photography have earned her recognition as one of the pioneers of the genre, and her work continues to be celebrated for its artistic merit and cultural significance.

    Quote:

    “I felt that the camera grew an extension of my eyes and moved with me.”

    Inge Morath

    Ingeborg Hermine Morath (27 May 1923 – 30 January 2002 was a prominent street photographer. She is renowned for her candid and poetic photographs capturing everyday life in New York City, particularly in neighborhoods like Harlem and the Lower East Side. A friend of photographer Ernst Haas, she wrote articles to accompany his photographs and was invited by Robert Capa and Haas to Paris to join the newly founded Magnum agency as an editor and researcher . She was one of the first female photographers to join the legendary Magnum agency. While working on her own first assignments, Morath also assisted Henri Cartier-Bresson during 1953-54, becoming a full member in 1955.

    Morath was the third wife of Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Arthur Miller. Some of her most important work consists of portraits, but of passers-by as well as celebrities. She photographed a range of subjects: documentary stories like 1954’s Fiesta in Pamplona captured the Spanish city’s running of the bulls, or those from her extensive travels in China; singular street photography (see: A llama in Times Square); portraits; fashion photography; and work on sets of television and films.

    Quote:

    “To take pictures had become a necessity and I did not want to forgo it for anything.”

    Jill Freedman

    Jill Freedman (October 19, 1939 – October 9, 2019) was a diligent street and documentary American photographer who spent her life capturing the complexities of the day, with rare veracity and grace. Originally published in 1981, Street Cops represents her most iconic body of work, one that embodies the sensitivity and perspicacity for which she is renowned. She often spent months immersed with her subjects, observing them through her lens as they went about their daily lives. She appeared in solo and group exhibitions throughout the world, and contributed to many prominent publications.

    Quote:

    “I like to work two ways, either on a specific idea or just wandering around, getting lost, snapping. Eventually all the wanderings go together, and then I find out what I’ve been doing.”

    Lisette Model

    Lisette Model (born Elise Amelie Felicie Stern; November 10, 1901 – March 30, 1983) was an Austrian-born American photographer primarily known for the frank humanism of her street photography. Lisette Model began her creative life as a student of music. She never formally studied photography but took it up in the 1930s while living in Paris. Model’s images can be categorized as “street photography,” a style which developed after the invention of the hand-held camera, which made quick, candid shots possible.

    Model’s main subject was the social and psychological landscape of New York City during the 1940s. Lisette Model’s photography exemplifies the European photographic tradition and its influence on American modern photography. Avant-garde techniques such as low-angles, sense of movement, window reflections, and natural photomontages defined her approach. she met the Russian painter Evsa Model, Moving to Paris in 1924, whom she married and gaine her surname.

    Quotes:

    “Photography through the camera is an instrument of detection. We photograph not only what we know, but also what we don’t know.”

    “I have often been asked what I wanted to prove by my photographs. The answer is, I don’t want to prove anything. They prove to me, and I am the one who gets the lesson.”

    Margaret Bourke-White

    Margaret Bourke-White (June 14, 1904 – August 27, 1971) was an American documentary photographer, Life magazine’s first female photographer, and the first female war correspondent credentialed to work in combat zones during World War II. She captured countless iconic images of 20th-century life, conflict, and the politicians at its center. She was the first foreign photographer to make pictures of Soviet industry and the only Western photographer to witness the German invasion of Moscow in 1941.

    One of her most iconic pictures came after the World War II, when she visited India and captured Mahatma Gandhi reading peacefully in his home, merehours before his assassination in 1948. She served as a photographer for Life during Korean War of 1950–1953. She was a great and tenacious photographer. She was awarded US Camera Achievement Award in 1963 and Honor Roll Award from American Society of Magazine Photographers in 1964. Her work was her life, and her life was flamboyantly spectacular.

    Quote:

    “Photography is a very subtle thing. You must let the camera take you by the hand, as it were, and lead you into your subject.”

    Mary Ellen Mark

    Mary Ellen Mark (March 20, 1940 – May 25, 2015 was known for her exceptional work as a street photographer, among other genres. she earned a BA in painting and art history and an MA in photojournalism from the University of Pennsylvania. Her work highlighted Vietnam War protesters and societal outcasts in order to underscore their importance to contemporary society. Her best known works include studies of severely ill women at Oregon State Mental Hospital and runaway teenagers in Seattle.

    She also worked in India for many years, producing studies of Mother Teresa, circuses, and brothels in Bombay. Mark has been presented with the Cornell Capa Award (2001) and an Infinity Award (1997) from the International Center of Photography, an Erna & Victor Hasselblad Foundation grant (1997), and a John Simon Guggenheim fellowship (1994). Her works are held by institutions including the J. Paul Getty Museum; the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and the Whitney Museum of American Art.

    Quotes:

    “I just think it’s important to be direct and honest with people about why you’re photographing them and what you’re doing. After all, you are taking some of their soul, and I think you have to be clear about that.”

    “I think you have to have a real point of view that’s your own. You have to tell it your way. And, I think that it’s a mistake to shoot for a specific magazine’s point of view because it’s never going to be as good. You have to shoot for yourself and photograph [the way] you believe it.”

    Rebecca Lepkoff

    Rebecca Lepkoff (born Rebecca Brody; August 4, 1916 – August 17, 2014) was an American street photographer. About 1945 she joined the Photo League, and for the next four years attended its classes, studying with Paul Strand, among others, and also exhibiting her work in the League’s group shows. She is best known for her images of New York and its people taken during the 1940s and 1950s, especially of Jewish immigrants on the Lower East Side.

    Her work has been featured in a number of books, galleries, and museum exhibits, including A History of Women Photographers by Naomi Rosenblum; Bystander: A History of Street Photography by Joel Meyerowitz and Colin Westerbeck; and “The Radical Camera, New York’s Photo League (1936-1951). She photographed with a strong sense of light and abstraction and captured the rhythm of the street.

    Quote:

    “I went outside and at that time, people lived in the streets—everything happened in the streets,”

    Ruth Orkin

    Ruth Orkin (September 3, 1921 – January 16, 1985) was an American photojournalist and filmmaker street photographer, She worked as a nightclub photographer. During the day, she also shot baby portraits to make extra money, which enabled the purchase of her first ‘professional’ camera. She spent her free time wandering the city streets, capturing compelling images of everyday life, including candid portraits of children in her neighborhood.

    In 1952 Orkin married photographer, filmmaker and fellow Photo League member Morris Engel. Orkin and Engel collaborated on two major independent feature films, Little Fugitive which was nominated for an Academy Award in 1953, and Lovers and Lollipops (1955). After the success of the two films, Orkin returned to photography, taking color shots of Central Park as seen through her apartment window.

    Orkin photographed Hollywood stars, renowned musicians, and everyday people on the streets of New York City, Italy, Israel, and many other locations. Her work is characterized by honesty and sensitivity, as well as the same deep regard for her subjects that underpinned the images of the other great photographers of the post-war period. In 1959 Orkin was named one of “The Ten Top Women Photographers in the U.S.” along with Dorothea Lange and Margaret Bourke-White by the Professional Photographers of America.

    Quotes:

    “Being a photographer is making people look at what I want them to look at.”

    “To be a photojournalist takes experience, skill, endurance, energy, salesmanship, organization, wheedling, climbing, gatecrashing, etc. – plus an eye and patience.”

    Susan Meiselas

    Susan Meiselas (born June 21, 1948) is an American photographer. She has captured compelling images of life in various urban environments and on the streets. She joined Magnum Photos in 1976 and has worked as a freelance photographer since then. Meiselas is best known for her coverage of the insurrection in Nicaragua and her documentation of human rights issues in Latin America, which were published widely throughout the world.

    Her work is included in American and international collections. She has been the President of the Magnum Foundation since 2007, with a mission to expand diversity and creativity in documentary photography. Her awards include the Robert Capa Gold Medal, Leica Award for Excellence, Maria Moors Cabot Prize, the Hasselblad Foundation Prize, the Cornell Capa Infinity Award, and most recently, the Harvard Arts Medal.

    Quote:

    “Finding a photograph is often like picking up a piece from a jigsaw-puzzle box with the cover missing. There’s no sense of the whole. Each image is a mysterious part of something not yet revealed.”

    Vivian Maier

    Vivian Dorothy Maier (February 1, 1926 – April 21, 2009) was an American street photographer whose work was discovered and recognized after her death. She is often referred to as the Mary Poppins of Street Photography on account of the fact that she spent most of her career working as a nanny. She also produced a number of self-portraits (black-and-white and color) which have given the world a picture of an otherwise unknown, intensely private figure. During her lifetime, Maier’s photographs were unknown and unpublished; many of her negatives were never developed.

    A Chicago collector, John Maloof, acquired some of Maier’s photos in 2007, while two other Chicago-based collectors, Ron Slattery and Randy Prow, also found some of Maier’s prints and negatives in her boxes and suitcases around the same time. Photographer Mary Ellen Mark has compared her work to that of Helen Levitt , Robert Frank, Lisette Model, and Diane Arbus. Joel Meyerowitz, also a street photographer, has said that Maier’s work was “suffused with the kind of human understanding, warmth and playfulness that proves she was ‘a real shooter’.”

    Quotes:

    “I’m a sort of spy.”

    Curated  by Editor-in-Chief  Masoud Gharaei
  • IMAGENATION PARIS 2023

    IMAGENATION PARIS 2023

    ImageNation Paris

     

    From 10 to 12 November 2023, ImageNation will be back in Paris, the city that saw the birth of photography almost two centuries ago. Thanks to the many festivals and fairs, the French capital is, more than ever, the crossroads of the new trends. Over all, Paris Photo has seen attracting important collectors and art enthusiasts from all over the world. Along with this, during Paris Photo days, the city becomes an ideal stage for the photographic works of the most interesting international artists in dialogue with the audience.
    __________________________________________________________________________________________________
    Nathan LANDERS  •  Anna MULLER  •  Felix KAYSER  •  Salomé DECHAUD  •  Jacques MEZGER  •  Adina DAVIDSON  •  Alana CARTWRIGHT  •  Alina HAGER  •  Alizé JIREH  •  Alma HASER  •  Alvaro RODRIGUEZ  •  Amy LIDGETT  •  Anastasia LORIOLI  •  Ann-Louise SODERLUND  •  Anna LABELLE  •  Astrid JI  •  Bartek WALCZUK  •  Benny & MATAN  •  Carlo DIAMANTI  •  Cédric BENET  •  Célia PRIAT  •  Céline AIETA  •  Charlotte ASSAD-GRAZIANI  •  Chikashi YANAGI  •  Cindy KONITS  •  Claudia CABRERO MALAGA  •  Clement SIEGRIED  •  Cordelia LAWLER  •  Costanza SALINI  •  Cristian IACONO  •  Darina UMKA  •  Despina SPYROU  •  Didi VON BOCH  •  Dmytro BONDARENKO  •  Eddy PRADELLES  •  Emma HELENA  •  Eola MIN  •  Esther GEUSKENS  •  Estrella CARABALLO  •  Evan MURPHY  •  Fritzi SCHWARZBAUER  •  Giacomo TAZZINI  •  Guilhelm DIJOUX  •  Hannes CASPAR  •  Hector PALACIOS  •  Indra ARREZ  •  Ingrid JORAND  •  Jan KWAN  •  Joanna CHUDY  •  Joshua AMIRTHASINGH  •  Julia CASESNOVES BALLESTER  •  Kaisa Maria HOLLANTI  •  Karoliina BARLUND  •  Katya PANOVA  •  Kevin ALDRICH  •  Kristina AYUSHEVA  •  Kristina CHAPLYGINA  •  Kymara AKINPELUMI  •  Larisa USMANOVA  •  Laura SGHERRI and Viola BUTI
    __________________________________________________________________________________________________
    Nanda HAGENAARS  •  Loc BOYLE  •  Markus WEAVER  •  Svetlana JOVANOVIC  •  Marco TENAGLIA  •  Ben BRADISH-ELLAMES  •  Marion COULOMB and Thibaud PONCE  •  Anna NEUBAUER  •  Léa BOURCIER  •  Leonie BRAUN  •  Lesya YASNITSKA  •  Lien PHAM  •  Lorella CASTILLO  •  Louie SALTO  •  Luda SHVETS  •  Maira DIAS RAY  •  Margo ERMOLAEVA  •  Marie DREEZEN  •  Marie MEISTER  •  Marta ROMASHINA  •  Mathilde VEY  •  Mia CONOLLY  •  Miguel BENALES  •  Mika MORET  •  Mika SAHIN  •  Mirko MONDIALI  •  Naomi PECQUEUX  •  Narges KOOHBOR  •  Nas NIXX  •  Nass LOUNES  •  Nele DORN  •  Nienke ELENBASS  •  Paola PADRON  •  Patricia PETTITT  •  Randal YOKOMOTO  •  Roberto DE MITRI  •  Romy MAXIME  •  Sandra DE FEUDIS  •  Sara GENTILINI  •  Sebastian VISTISEN TOFT  •  Sofya SVETLAYA  •  Susi BELIANSKA  •  Tatiana IVASHCHENKO  •  Tatiana SAAVEDRA  •  Thomas DRIESEN  •  Tiago SALES  •  Valentina HERNANDEZ GUZMAN  •  Valeria SARTO  •  Veronica NESCI  •  Véronique L’HOSTE  •  Victoria VINAS  •  Vital ADIMALE  •  Xiangyu DONG  •  Yuan YAO  •  Zorica PURLIJA
    __________________________________________________________________________________________________

    ARLETTE PHOTO SHOW

     

    Annabelle FADAT  •  Auden BUI  •  Baptiste HENRY  •  Camille MAUCOTEL  •  Camille ROBIOU DU PONT  •  Cedric HAYABUSA  •  Charlotte CLAIN  •  Chloé DESTUYNDER  •  Cristina RAMIREZ  •  Daniel CRUZ  •  Denis TUNGUZ  •  Dor ELIYAHU  •  Elise PECQUERY  •  Eylül EZIK  •  Florian PEYROT  •  Gabbie BURNS  •  Gaël BERNARD  •  Gal SHAHAR  •  Julia DIMITROVA  •  Justine ROBINEAU  •  Karolina KRASINSKA  •  Kaveh MAGHSOUDI  •  Kelly CASEY LOVETT  •  Keng PEREIRA  •  Laura SALES  •  Lisa HABETS  •  Lucas SCHIFFLER  •  Ludwig OBLIN  •  Margot MARTINEZ  •  Mario STUMPF  •  Maud TENDA  •  Mazarine EGGERICKX  •  Miguel ROZPIDE  •  Monsieur BONHEUR  •  Nadia DOSS  •  Nevena LUKIC  •  Nicolas COSTY  •  Nicolas RONCHETTI  •  Nicolò MONTIS  •  Nikita PUZAKOV  •  Omar KRIKEZ  •  Radek KULUSH  •  Sabine AGOSTINI  •  Sarah LOESCHER  •  Sinead BUNN  •  Tetyana RYNKOVA  •  The Wild STRAWBERRY  •  Théo SAFFROY  •  Thomas SAMINADA  •  Thomas VONG  •  Thomas WIEN  •  Val FAYET  •  Valentin SEGOUIN  •  Xavier RUSTUL  •  Xavier SOUTY  •  Yannik SAINT-JUST  •  YOVO  •  Zoé CAVARO  •  Zoe SCHULZ  //  Curated by Théo BELASRI
    __________________________________________________________________________________________________

    FREE BODIES

     

    Alica MILEWSKI  •  Alina SIMONOVA  •  Amandine GRULOIS  •  Anastasiia MAISKAYA  •  Andrej GABOR  •  Anja PAPUGA  •  Beccy SMITH  •  Bénédicte DONET  •  Daisha ALMARAVISION  •  Daisy SEILERN  •  Danae CHARALAMPIDOU  •  Daria FINOGINA  •  Darien PANNELLA  •  Dean RAPHAEL  •  Dominika ANDRZEJCZAK  •  Elena BREUER  •  Elisabeth MOCHNER  •  Elsa Marie KEEFE  •  Inge VAN HARSKAMP  •  Ewa HACKWORTH  •  FemFIGURE  •  Gabrielle ROSHELLI  •  Giuseppe ATTANASIO  •  Ieva GRICIUTE’  •  Jaqueline LOUAN  •  Kaja HORVAT  •  Kenji SHIMIZU  •  Krista ESPINO  •  Ksenia IKKERT  •  Kyra HOLDAMPF  •  Maria FYNSK NORUP  •  MoHo POURAZIZI  •  Neoza GOFFIN  •  Nimrod GROSS  •  Paula CIRUGEDA  •  Rachel GRAY  •  Simeon VAN DER HOEVEN  •  Sophie KAMPF  •  Svala JOHANNSDOTTIR  •  Tatiana ILINA  •  Veronika LAVROVA  •  Ypatia KORNAROU  •  ZORA
    __________________________________________________________________________________________________

    THAT MAGIC MOMENT – A POLAROID EXHIBITION

     

    Edie SUNDAY  •  Carl FEHRES  •  Barbara SCHIEB  •  Gundula BLUMI  •  Camille GUERIN  •  Sara ROBINSON  •  Yoshihide ONO  •  Rachael BAEZ  •  Lula LAUINGER  •  Cristina ALTIERI  •  Simone CAROLLO  •  Sun XIN  •  KURT  •  Stefanie HEIDER  •  Alessio ROBERTO  •  Alexander GONZALEZ DELGADO  •  Alexandre MILAN  •  Angela REGINA  •  Annalisa GAETA  •  Camilla SCHMITT  •  Cecilia ROSSETTO  •  Claudio GOMBOLI  •  Cristina COMPARATO  •  Enrique RALVO’  •  Ernesto NOTARANTONIO  •  Florentijn BODDENDIJK  •  Frances BEATTY  •  Fred JOHNSSON  •  Grit DORA  •  Janette DUTTON  •  Jayme PERALEZ  •  Jürgen GRIEGER  •  Kieran McPEAKE  •  Lolo BATES  •  Luisa BRANDSTETTER  •  Lukas TAUBE  •  Marco RAGANA  •  Mario BATTAGLIA  •  Marjolaine VUARNESSON  •  Miguel DELIAERT  •  Natalia FILATOVA  •  Nicole SANTIN  •  Philippe GALANOPOULOS  •  Regis AUBERTIN  •  Samantha ASHCRAFT  •  Scarlett POPPY  •  Scott ASANO  •  Simona SALERNO  •  Stéphane VENDRAN  •  Thomas BERLIN  //  Curated by Francesco SAMBATI
    __________________________________________________________________________________________________

    STREET SANS FRONTIERES

     

    Craig WHITEHEAD  •  Jake INEZ  •  Skander KHLIF  •  Ximena ECHAGUE  •  Guido KLUMPE  •  Luca PACCUSSE  •  Alexandra AVLONITIS  •  Manuel ARMENIS  •  Omar AL JIWARI  •  Regula TSCHUMI  •  Hendrik KOCH  •  Fred NOGIER  •  Gianluca MORTAROTTI  •  Lukasz WASZAK  •  Youngho GO  •  David MONCEAU  •  Catherine LE SCOLAN-QUERE  •  Suresh NAGANATHAN  •  Catherine AUZURET  •  Betty MANOUSOS  •  Annu ESKO  •  Arthur BAUER  •  Sonia FITOUSSI  •  Souhayl A  •  Aaron MUNDOW  •  Adrienne HUTCHINGS  •  Aldo AMORETTI  •  Alessandro ZANONI  •  Andrea MISUROVA  •  Andrea POZZONI  •  Andrew GIMBLET  •  Carlotta DI SANDRO  •  Carolina LOPEZ BOHORQUEZ  •  Courtney SHAW  •  Damien LOREK  •  Eftihia BUFFINGTON  •  Eiichi YOSHIOKA  •  Eleni ALBAROSA  •  Emilie VERNEREY  •  Fabien ECOCHARD  •  Fabrizio RAGGIRI  •  Giacomo SANNIPOLI  •  Jens OCHLICH  •  Jérôme TOURNAIRE  •  John KAYACAN  •  Jukka VEHMAS  •  Kenn COSTANZO  •  Marco BRECCIAROLI  •  Massimo GARDA  •  Michael SWISTERSKI  •  Michiel HEIJMANS  •  Nicola FIORAVANTI  •  Niels JANIN  •  Ornella MAZZOLA  •  Philippe SARFATI  •  Rachel NIXON  •  Rafael HERNANDEZ  •  Roberta VAGLIANI  •  Sébastien DURAND  •  Stefania BONFIGLIO  •  Stijn HOEKSTRA  •  Vica BOGAERTS  //  Curated by Martin VEGAS
    __________________________________________________________________________________________________

    ATLAS OF HUMANITY

     

    Alessandro BERGAMINI  •  TREVOR COLE  •  Gon POULLET  •  Giovanna ARYAFARA  •  Inger VANDYKE  •  David DHAEN  •  Joaquin BARATA  •  Lynn COFFEY  •  France LECLERC  •  Marios FORSOS  •  Nicola DUCATI  •  Steven GOETHALS  •  Marie DUVIVIER  •  Esteban TORO  •  Alexander & Burkhard LEY  •  Eliane BAND  •  Diego GIUSTI  •  James FARR  •  Benoit FERON  •  Anne-Françoise TASNIER  •  Frances BRUCHEZ  •  Ingrid KOEDOOD  •  Juan Carlos RODRIGUEZ  •  Johan GERRITS  •  Jonathan GALBREATH  •  Lynn FRASER  •  Magdalena BAGRIANOW  •  Maike VARA  •  Maricruz SAINZ DE AJA  •  Stephen HERMIDA  •  Suzie WEISS  •  Tom PIAI  •  Ron GESSER  •  Paolo CINQUE  •  Max VERE-HODGE  •  Megan KWASNIAK  •  Michael CHINNICI  •  Nancy SAVAGE  •  Eline DE VRIES  •  Ella MACK  •  Enzo MISTRETTA  •  Anthonny VUILLEUMIER  •  Apostolos KALOUDIS  •  Aurora ARCESE  •  Aga SZYDLIK  •  Alessandro MALAGUTI  •  Ana ABRAO  •  Andrea MIGLIORE  •  Avi DADIA  •  Carlo DEPAULIS  •  Carol FOOTE  •  Chiara FELMINI  •  Claudia MASSAINI  •  Craig Victor BAULCOMB  •  Dawn LI  •  Elena MOLINA  •  Fabio CONVERTITO  •  Filipe SILVA  •  Francesco CINQUE  •  Grazia BERTANO  •  Hadriel TORRES  •  Hector RUIZ GOLOBART  •  Ilaria MIANI  •  Ivy GORDON  •  Jean-Pierre DUVERGE  •  Juanra NORIEGA  •  Julia BOWERS  •  Katy GOMEZ  •  Luca ARCESE  •  Luigi FASCIA  •  Matteo CARTA  •  Natalia MROZ  •  Nathaniel FAROUZ  •  Piotr KOWALSKI  •  Ruben DE LA TORRE  •  Safaa KAGAN  •  Sandrine VILLA  •  Sarah CRAKE  •  Sergio TENREIRO  •  SilkSWATI  •  Sofia SALDANHA  •  Stefano ASCANIO  •  Stefano MINIATIi  •  Valerie LEONARD  •  Virginie MERCKAERT  //  Curated by Martin VEGAS
    __________________________________________________________________________________________________

    ImageNation Paris   Galerie Joseph

  • Harry Gruyaert: La part des choses

    Harry Gruyaert: La part des choses

    Harry Gruyaert: La part des choses

    From June 15 to September 24, LE BAL presents the works of Belgian photographer Harry Gruyaert, featuring a vast selection of vintage Cibachrome prints. This exhibition traces an unprecedented journey through the works of an iconic figure in contemporary photography
    Harry Gruyaert, born in Antwerp in 1941, stands as one of the pioneers of color photography, inspired by the great American photographers he discovered and admired from an early age, such as Joel Meyerowitz, William Eggleston, and Stephen Shore. Departing from the confines of his native Belgium, Gruyaert found himself in New York during the early 1970s, where he encountered pop art and learned to “view the ordinary with a fresh perspective, accepting the inherent beauty in the world, even in its ugliness.” Influenced by his interactions with avant-garde artists like Gordon Matta-Clark and Richard Nanas, Gruyaert’s outlook was further shaped by Antonioni’s film “Red Desert,” a work he had watched countless times, instilling in him a profound desire to explore the world—to immerse himself fully, not merely to describe or inform, but to mold and shape it. His goal was to capture his own perception of things rather than the things themselves—to become a visionary rather than a mere observer.

    Gruyaert describes this process as a physical struggle, an intimate battle with objects and individuals: “I throw myself into things, immersing myself in their mystery and alchemy. Things attract me, and I, in turn, attract things.” In the flow of life, where everything seems to slip through our fingers, Gruyaert believes that in order for “everything to fall into place,” one must simultaneously be present and absent—losing oneself to fully grasp the essence, the texture, and every aspect of the here and now. This requires cultivating a sense of foresight and surrendering to an instinctual arrangement of forms, colors, symbols, light, and motifs.
    Alain Bergala, in “Correspondance New Yorkaise,” distinguishes between two types of photographers: those who believe in reality and make photography a means of capturing presence, and those who perceive reality as elusive, only able to capture absence. According to this perspective, Harry Gruyaert stands as an anomaly—a photographer whose visceral presence in the world aims above all to capture its fleeting and intangible nature. Through his images, characterized by isolated trajectories, disjointed spaces, and bodies on the fringes, Gruyaert’s patterns contribute to revealing the absurdity of the world, the surreal collage of life and its fragmented moments.

    “What if photography could be about communing with a state of solitude and telling a lie that is truer than truth itself.” (Diane Dufour)

    This exhibition brings together, for the first time, 80 vintage prints created between 1974 and 1996 using the cibachrome process. Known for its sharpness, vibrant colors, and saturated surfaces, cibachrome was invented by Hungarian chemist Bela Gaspar in 1933 and trademarked in 1963. It involves producing prints from slides through the destruction of dyes incorporated into the exposed and developed paper emulsion—a positive-to-positive process. These rare prints have been generously loaned to Le BAL from various collectors and Gallery FIFTY ONE in Antwerp, allowing this extraordinary gathering of works to take place.
    On the occasion of the exhibition, LE BAL Books offers an exclusive limited edition print by the Belgian photographer. Limited edition print of the photograph: “Belgium, Brussels, Brussels-Midi Station, 1981 © Harry Gruyaert / Magnum Photos”.

     

    Harry Gruyaert : La part des choses From June 15 to September 24, 2023 LE BAL – Paris
    More info on:

    https://www.lebal.fr/

    https://www.magnumphotos.com/

    https://www.harrygruyaert-film.com/

  • Daniel Tschitsch

    Daniel Tschitsch

    Daniel Tschitsch

    I came across street photography in 2014 after having tried almost every genre of photography since completing my photography apprenticeship back in 2011.

    Inspired to a large extent by the photographers Bruce Gilden, Vivian Maier, Elliott Erwitt, Alex Webb and others, I’ve been moving through the streets ever since, trying to incorporate a bit of everything into my photos. But the bottom line for me is about the real, decisive moment. Not staged and pure. For me, this form of photography is the opposite of predominantly commissioned photography, where everything usually has to be beautiful and aesthetic.

    I was lucky enough to be part of several exhibitions and I am the Co founder of the “Munichstreetcollective” together with Sebastian Hermann. In addition to street photography, I also do commercial stuff and free shootings with models predominantly on analog film. I was born and grew up in Munich, Germany. I am married and have two children. My main job is as a TV cameraman and photographer.

    [thb_button_text link=”url:http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danieltschitsch.de|title:Daniel%20Tschitsch%20Website|target:%20_blank|rel:nofollow”]
    [thb_button_text link=”url:http%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Fdaniel_tschitsch|title:Daniel%20Tschitsch%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|rel:nofollow”]
    © Daniel Tschitsch
    © Daniel Tschitsch
    © Daniel Tschitsch
    © Daniel Tschitsch
    © Daniel Tschitsch
    © Daniel Tschitsch
    © Daniel Tschitsch
    © Daniel Tschitsch
    © Daniel Tschitsch
    © Daniel Tschitsch
    © Daniel Tschitsch
    © Daniel Tschitsch
    © Daniel Tschitsch
    © Daniel Tschitsch
    © Daniel Tschitsch
    © Daniel Tschitsch
  • Ali Motamedi

    Ali Motamedi

    Ali Motamedi

    When the City Went to Sleep

    It was winter of 2020 when I moved into a new apartment in Manhattan. One month later, news from overseas brought an unknown virus: COVID-19 was spreading everywhere. Soon the stores, restaurants, and museums were closed. The shadows of fear and loneliness were everywhere. The city that never sleeps was finally asleep.

    Weeks passed and I was trapped in a tiny studio apartment in Manhattan. I tracked the number of dead in the news, and I heard that some stores were being looted and some types of food were not available anymore. New York looked like a different city to me. After a few weeks of living in lockdown, an inner force asked me to go out, a curiosity mixed with anxiety. I had more free time to walk in the evening and at night, so I started walking in the streets I used to know for many years. From Grand Central Terminal to park benches in my neighborhood, from a local coffee shop to Central Park and streets nearby, I roamed around and tried to get to know the place where I was living.
    I started the project in March 2020 and continued it until the end of the year. 

    [thb_button_text link=”url:http%3A%2F%2Fwww.alimotamedi.com|title:Ali%20Motamedi%20Website|target:%20_blank|rel:nofollow”]
    [thb_button_text link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Finstagram.com%2Falimotamedi|title:Ali%20Motamedi%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|rel:nofollow”]
    U.S. flag at half-staff as a remembrance of the people who have died from COVID-19, Central Park, April 11
    The Oyster Bar ramps, Grand Central Terminal, March 31
    38th Street and Tunnel Exit St, March 31
    Someone clapping and chanting for healthcare workers at 7pm, Tudor City Place, April 5
    A health worker waiting at the bus stop, Columbus Circle, June 5
    A discarded Coronavirus glove on the ground, Tudor City Place, April 23 “Love you”, Get Well Soon”: Hand-written signs on construction fence, 41th Street and 1st Avenue, April 6
    Love you”, Get Well Soon”: Hand-written signs on construction fence, 41th Street and 1st Avenue, April 6
    DELICO flower shop not selling flowers until further notice, 41st Street and 2nd Avenue, March 29
    Picolo Angelo restaurant operating with limited seating capacity, West Village, July 15
    Self-portrait, 41th Street and 1st Avenue, July 12
    The Lake, Central Park, April 7
    Sheep Meadow, Central Park, June 10
    42nd Street and 2nd Avenue, March 29
  • Giuseppe Cardoni

    Giuseppe Cardoni

     Giuseppe Cardoni

    Metropolitan Fragments

    The environment is delimited, circumscribed of the subway, with a complete absence of the external landscape that often represents a container of memories.The protagonists are absorbed in their thoughts with their heads bowed or intent on looking with the absent gaze of those who look but do not see, as if they were imprisoned in their inner world. We are almost facing an aquarium in which motionless and / or unconscious fish swim. Loneliness is almost palpable and silence seems to saturate every space of the environment in a metaphysical suspension. People anonymous, unknown, isolated, closed in themselves, unable to communicate, who despite being close to each other almost never interact with each other. The scene is still, extracted from the present and frozen out of time. (Metropolitan Fragments is an ongoing project)

    © Giuseppe Cardoni
    © Giuseppe Cardoni
    © Giuseppe Cardoni
    © Giuseppe Cardoni
    © Giuseppe Cardoni
    © Giuseppe Cardoni
    © Giuseppe Cardoni
    © Giuseppe Cardoni
    © Giuseppe Cardoni
    © Giuseppe Cardoni
  • Mehdi Rouhbakhsh

    Mehdi Rouhbakhsh

    Mehdi Rouhbakhsh

    Birth in 1983, Franco, I grew up in an artistic family. My uncle was a known artist in the field of contemporary painting. I myself after finishing my academic study in the universities of Paris and obtained my master’s degree in International & E-Commerce, jointed to public society more involved to the ordinary life of people around the world.
    Then I have started to capture the scenes and promote the feel of photography art by observing the path of the great photographers like as Cartier Bresson and Sebastiao Salgado and oriented my sense to taking the shot in the street by recording every moment of the ordinary life, basically on the technic of BnW. Knowing the fact that the initiate’s motivation of the photographer is capturing all that is commonly unnoticed, the age of Covid and pandemic for me was the exploring a unique word that it was reflected exactly what was differently attractive in front of my camera.

    © Mehdi Rouhbakhsh
    © Mehdi Rouhbakhsh
    © Mehdi Rouhbakhsh
    © Mehdi Rouhbakhsh
    © Mehdi Rouhbakhsh
    © Mehdi Rouhbakhsh
    © Mehdi Rouhbakhsh
    © Mehdi Rouhbakhsh
    © Mehdi Rouhbakhsh
    © Mehdi Rouhbakhsh
    © Mehdi Rouhbakhsh
    © Mehdi Rouhbakhsh
    © Mehdi Rouhbakhsh
    © Mehdi Rouhbakhsh
    © Mehdi Rouhbakhsh
    © Mehdi Rouhbakhsh
    © Mehdi Rouhbakhsh
    © Mehdi Rouhbakhsh
    © Mehdi Rouhbakhsh
    © Mehdi Rouhbakhsh
  • Tommaso Banti

    Tommaso Banti

    Tommaso Banti

    In Magenta

    “In Magenta” is a series I completed in February 2021. I’ve been trying through the use of a flash off camera and an old reflex to explore my hometown, my neighbours, the beach, where people wander endlessly and dead bodies are carried on the shore, unable to escape. The use of colour is meant to underline the enstrangement between me and what I once called home following the Corona Virus pandemic and the global lockdown.

    © Tommaso Banti
    © Tommaso Banti
    © Tommaso Banti
    © Tommaso Banti
    © Tommaso Banti
    © Tommaso Banti
    © Tommaso Banti
    © Tommaso Banti
    © Tommaso Banti
    © Tommaso Banti
  • Ted Lai

    Ted Lai

    Ted Lai

    Densely populated and hyper-connected by technology, people in thriving metropolises are paradoxically growing further apart; some finding solace in their solitude.

    Solitude is bliss; Prince Edward
    Solitude is bliss; Central A lone protester makes way through a tunnel barred by protests that gripped and polarised Hong Kong.
    Solitude is bliss; Sheung Wan A last standing metal work shop, juxtaposed against newer stores on Upper Lascar Row.
    Solitude is bliss; Guangzhou
    Solitude is bliss; Guangzhou A guard takes a break from patrolling a istorical theatre.
    Solitude is bliss; Sai Ying Pun
    Solitude is bliss: North Point A calligrapher and sign maker gazes at his life’s work.
    Solitude is bliss; North Point
    Solitude is bliss; Mong Kok
  • Paul Kessel

    Paul Kessel

    Paul Kessel

    Hauptbahnhof

    Hauptbahnhof, the main train station in Frankfurt Germany, is a major hub for European travel. The skylights generate good light and as I have been there many times, I like to photograph there. All photos are candid and mostly no more than 10 feet away.

    © Paul Kessel
    © Paul Kessel
    © Paul Kessel
    © Paul Kessel
    © Paul Kessel
    © Paul Kessel
    © Paul Kessel
    © Paul Kessel
  • Maude Bardet

    Maude Bardet

    Maude Bardet

    Baloonanza

    Every street photographer has items that attracted them more than others. For me, these are cotton candy, hanging fabrics and mostly… balloons . Balloons are colorful, have a nice shape, seem to dance in the sky and are usually accompanied with playful kids. They can also yield mysterious images by hiding people’s faces. They are for sure a good starting point in a photographic composition

    Aliyev center, Baku
    Family in Jodhpur
    Selling balloons in Alexandria
    Ad Deyorah neighborhood, Cairo
    Syrian refugee girl in Gaziantep
    Waterfront in Alexandria
    Aliyev center, Baku
    Kutor neighborhood, Baku
  • Matthew Kamholtz

    Matthew Kamholtz

    Matthew Kamholtz

    On Screen

    These pictures were born of necessity. As the global Covid-19 pandemic raged during the Summer of 2020, the epidemic of police killings sparked mass Black Lives Matter protests throughout the United States. But as thousands of people took to the streets, I was obliged to shelter at home as the protests, and the often brutal police reaction, played out on screens in television newscasts, live streams, and video uploads, bringing the streets into our homes. And so, I photographed the screens as I watched, a process that distorted reality, just as it paradoxically revealed its intensity and emotion. Although I was physically distant, the images felt intensely present.

    © Matthew Kamholtz
    © Matthew Kamholtz
    © Matthew Kamholtz
    © Matthew Kamholtz
    © Matthew Kamholtz
    © Matthew Kamholtz
    © Matthew Kamholtz
    © Matthew Kamholtz
    © Matthew Kamholtz
    © Matthew Kamholtz