NSFW | Featured Photographer: La Fille Renne - “Reclaiming Our Bodies: Systemic, Gynecological, and Obstetric Violence Towards Our Sexes in the Framework of Health”
La Fille Renne––non-binary photographer and co-director of feminist media, Polysème Magazine––gives insight to their series, Reclaiming Our Bodies: Systemic, Gynecological, and Obstetric Violence Towards Our Sexes in the Framework of Health, a project that brings awareness of gynecological and obstetrical violence.
Featured Photographer: Jamie Swick - “Instant Transcendence”
Jamie Swick’s environmental portraits of the Pacific Northwest produce a distinct stillness that is undeniable. Her picturesque landscapes suggest a new era of environmentalism that isn’t fought by tying yourself to a tree, but by walking among them.
Featured Photographer: Luca Tombolini - "Vistas Paradossales”
Luca Tombolini’s series Vistas artistically explores the scientific idea of Space, Time, and their relativity by asking viewers to consider the perception of their via place in the universe via the combination of long and multiple exposure landscapes and cameraless microscapes made of color drops in solvents.
Featured Photographer: Liz Albert - "Family Fictions”
Liz Albert’s series, Family Fictions, take us on a journey back in time to explore family and social dynamics in the 50s and 60s through photographic slides that she has found, purchased, and combined into diptychs.
Featured Photographer: Nettie Edwards - "Grave Goods"
Nettie Edwards uses the ephemeral photographic processes of anthotype and chlorophyll printing to create personal meditations on the transitory nature of existence. By embracing processes destined to degrade she confronts the ideas of loss, grief, and mortality.
Featured Photographer: Vincent Ricardel - "The Way Back"
Vincent Ricardel’s series “The Way Back” was created with a Hasselblad 500 CM camera and 19+-year-old Kodak Black and White Verichrome Pan film. His series masterfully challenges the notion that there are no frontiers left in the American West.
Featured Photographer: Jan Cook - "Fugue: A Dreamlike State"
What is chromoskedasic painting, you ask? Photographer, Jan Cook, has the explanation of this lesser-known process and the intention behind its use in her incredible body of work, “Fugue: A Dreamlike State.” A combination of printing and painting techniques like this is sure to lure you into this deeply mysterious work.
Featured Photographer: David Scheinbaum - “ENSŌ”
Flashback to the Spring of 2020 — a time of the unknown, and David Scheinbaum’s latest work was born. A one-year cameraless exploration of the ENSŌ – a journey, traveling back to the essence of photography, light, and chemistry. Explore more with our article on this fascinating photographer and his latest works.
Valley of the Sun: The Mystical, Magical Self-Portraits of Clare Marie Bailey
Inspired by 1960s B movies and counterculture, the works of Ellen Rogers, and the surreal landscape of the seaside Welsh town where she lives and works, Clare Marie Bailey’s Polaroid self-portraits blur the lines between fantasy and reality.
NSFW | Featured Photographer: Clément Marion’s Series "Phoenix"
Clément Marion’s series “Phoenix” features wet plate collodion photographs of severe burn victims that act as both hybrid artistic therapy for his models but also a commentary on important social constructs that influence their mental and emotional healing.
Featured Photographer: Suzanne Révy - "A Murmur in the Trees"
Suzanne Révy's latest series, "A Murmur in the Trees," imparts a sense of solitude that has been both endured and embraced through each season of this past year during the pandemic. These triptychs lure you in with their subtle details and shifting light.
Featured Photographer: Ed Carr's 5000+ Cyanotype Print Music Video
Alternative process photographer, printmaker, and researcher Ed Carr has created the first-ever music video made from over 5000 hand-printed cyanotypes for Tycho Jones and Globe Town Records. Learn all about his unique creation now!
Featured Photographer: Diane Meyer - "A Stitch in Time"
Diane Meyer’s “Berlin” investigates the former Berlin Wall using a combination of analog, digital, and mixed media processes that deceives the viewer to see pixelated sections that enhance a connection between forgetting and file corruption.
Featured Photographer: Gracie Baer’s Series "Corporeal Worth"
Gracie Baer’s series “Corporeal Worth” draws parallels between our relationship with the natural world and society by contemplating the commonality between animals and people, in both life and in death.
Featured Photographer: Kyle Lang's Series "Manifest Content"
Kyle Lang’s new series Manifest Content is a darkroom photography project that delves into themes of time, memory, dreams, subconsciousness, and the environment we find ourselves in, both while awake and lucid dreaming.
Featured Photographer: John F. Cooper's "Organic Portraits"
John F. Cooper’s series Organic Portraits is a timeless and fundamentally beautiful collection of portraits that were created to raise awareness for—and help preserve—the world's rainforests.
Featured Photographer: Cody Bratt's “The Other Stories"
Cody Bratt’s series “The Other Stories,” continues by using his great-grandfathers collection of negatives to explore a darker narrative of family history. The artist’s hand becomes evident as Bratt uses mixed media processes to create unique and tactile analog objects.
Featured Photographer: Fanzutti Flora’s Series “Erosion”
Fanzutti Flora’s Series “Erosion” features experimental large format negatives that embrace the idea of creative destruction by conjuring works of art that are impossible to create in-camera.
Featured Photographer: Nils Karlson's Series "Vastness"
Nils Karlson series Vastess explores the country of Iceland through a pinhole lens that describes the profound feeling of calm and quiet that evoke our primal urge for beautiful silence.
Featured Photographer: Stuart Clook's Precious Landscapes
Escape to the sublime wilderness of New Zealand through the lens of landscape photographer Stuart Clook. Utilizing historic printing processes, Stuart's serene and contemplative imagery provides a much needed respite from the bustle of modern life.