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Molly Lamb: Take Care of Your Sister
©Molly Lamb, untitled 02, from Take Care of Your Sister, courtesy of Rick Wester Fine Art, New York
From the first moment I discovered Molly Lamb’s work, I knew she was a true artis
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Andreas Tsonidis: Returning Home
©Andreas Tsonidis , Effie 2010
The sticky wicket of photographing family is to find a place of observation without judgement and/or to be able to observe while participating in the action
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Qiana Mestrich: Hard to Place
©Qiana Mestrich. From the self-published book, Hard To Place (2016).
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Polly Gaillard: December and Everything After
©Polly Gaillard, Fall Walk
Polly Gaillard has a new project, December and Everything After exploring the difficult terrain of documenting aging and ill parents.
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Troy Colby: 2017 Lenscratch Student Prize, Honorable Mention
©Troy Colby
For many parents, the camera comes out only to capture the ideal: grinning children at birthday parties, a sunny day at the beach, stiffly posed portraits in front of the Chri
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Liz Steketee: Reconstructing The Portrait
©Liz Steketee
Photographic artist Liz Steketee has recently opened a two-person exhibition, Reconstructing The Portrait: K.K.
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Christian Rodriguez: A Mixe Flower
©Christian Rodriguez
Christian Rodriguez has created a powerful photographic essay that captures the beauty and travesty of young women in Oaxaca, still children yet having children of th
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Sara Davidmann: Ken. To be Destroyed
In 2011, my siblings and I inherited a family archive of letters, photographs and papers from our mother, Audrey Davidmann.
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Nancy Borowick: Cancer Family
©Nancy Borowick, Howie and Laurel Borowick embrace in the bedroom of their home. They never could have imagined being diagnosed with stage-4 cancer at the same time. Chappaqua, New York.
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Lisa McCord: Nancy Sherwood: My Mother’s Passing
©Lisa McCord, Painting of My Mother, Nancy Sherwood, Los Angeles, 2015
Turning the camera on family can be cathartic, therapeutic, and insightful.
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Rebecca Webb and Jesse Burke: Sticks of the Sun, Ashes of the Night
©Jesse Burke
©Rebecca Webb
Some time back, photographer Rebecca Webb came across Jesse Burke’s photographs of his project, Wild and Precious where he examines and encourages a co










