Creating images that double as fine art, Matt Black is mapping how poverty is a major problem today, now, this minute and every minute.
Continue ReadingWar is not fashion and suffering is not funny. But the photo of this missile is both familiar and odd enough to seem uncanny.
Continue ReadingIt seems to me that the news photo too often is showing us only the aftermath. Too much of the damage is being done off-stage.
Continue ReadingThe world can seem lost to white noise and alternative facts, lurid emotions and garish displays of moral ugliness. Which may be why I find these images from the Observatory in Chile to be so comforting.
Continue ReadingPhotographs may have long wave influence, but they don’t end wars or famines or otherwise stop history in its tracks.
Continue ReadingConsidering how much conventional warfare is excused because it is assumed to be less destructive than nuclear weapons.
Continue ReadingThe world seems to be pitching into another reality, one that is more unreal than real, both present and still to come, and defined primarily by separation and violence, and by madness and helplessness.
Continue ReadingGrowing inequity leads to more demonstrations and other protests, and to violence. And to more gag photos.
Continue ReadingThe nuclear summit was important–unless, that is, you don’t mind having Your Town looking like this.
Continue ReadingIf you liked the space program, it will be a mixed blessing. If you like ruins, however, you will feel right at home.
Continue ReadingThe winners bring us closer not only to the world as it is, but also to the world as it is unfolding from past to present to future.
Continue ReadingOne of the fashion themes this year is that wealth is here to stay.
Continue ReadingIncredible, isn’t it? So perfectly designed and yet so strange. Ultramodern and yet medieval, like a space ship on a surveillance mission and a castle readied for battle, set off by itself in forbidding isolation and yet connected somehow to distant galaxies. The tableau is so unique and so...
Continue ReadingI doubt that the photographer was thinking of Caillebotte’s work when snapping the photo in Brussels, but the connection is there in several ways.
Continue ReadingThe effort to stop a ruthless tyranny can lead to a state where the Paris of today is only a memory.
Continue ReadingLet me suggest that the more interchangeable the images, they more they point toward the full significance of this historical moment.
Continue ReadingThe photo captures the bare life of the human subject in migration; the emblematic equipment of global transportation and a powerful but harsh global economy that permeates everyday life.
Continue ReadingThis photograph doesn’t tell us anything important that we don’t know, but it does provide the means to think about what we would rather ignore.
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