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Artists of Türkiye: Eren Sulamaci
© Eren Sulamaci, from Immediate Landscape
This week artist and curator Mehves Lelic shares the work of artists making photographs in Türkiye (Turkey).
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Love and Loss in the Cosmos: Valeria Sestua In Conversation with Vicente Isaías
© Valeria Sestua, Un Montículo de Pequeños Cristales, 2023. Courtesy the artist.
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Amor y Pérdida en el Cosmos: En Conversación con Valeria Sestua
© Valeria Sestua, Un Montículo de Pequeños Cristales, 2024. Cortesía de la artista.
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European Week: Sayuri Ichida
©Sayuri Ichida, Ctrl Shift + J, #012, 2023
Guest Editor and German photographer Melanie Schoeniger shares a week of European photographers whose work she finds inspiring.
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Kazunari Suzuki: Japan Guide Book
©Kazunari Suzuki, Japan Guide Book
One of the most exciting parts of my recent visit to Japan was working with photographic artists at the T3 Tokyo Photo Festival.
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Grace Weston: Reclaiming the Muse
Satiric Dancer by Andres Kertesz
©Grace Weston, After Kertesz
©Grace Weston, Mother’s Day
There is an opening scene in the movie, Barbie, that is a shot by shot replication of Stan
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Rebecca Sexton Larson: The Reluctant Caregiver
©Rebecca Sexton Larson, Idiom Series: Every Picture Tells A Story, 2018
I first encountered the work of Rebecca Sexton Larson when I saw the above image in an exhibition at at Cassilhaus.
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Oli Kellett: Cross Road Blues
©Oli Kellett, Cross Road Blues (Figueroa St, LA), 2016
©Oli Kellett, Cross Road Blues, published by Nazraeli press
“I’m looking for a moment where individuals are dwarfed by what s
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Interview with Kaitlin Santoro: Memory and Photographic Ephemera
© Kaitlin Santoro, “The side door was left ajar.”, Vitreography
“My work explores time, memory, and impermanence.
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In Conversation with Cig Harvey: Beauty, Books, and Installation
© Cig Harvey, “Apple Trees (Last Light)”
I was first introduced to the work of Cig Harvey in late 2020, at a time when I was just beginning to explore the natural world, col
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Interview with Kate Greene: Photographing What Is Unseen
© Kate Greene, image from the series, “So Much Water So Close to Home”
I first met Kate Greene as a visiting artist in one of my final critiques of undergrad.





















