Posts tagged featured photographers
Kite Park by Eric Davidove

“I live in Northern California which has recently suffered unprecedented fierce fires, smoke filled skies and some of the world’s unhealthiest air. In those rare moments when the air is considered healthy, I enjoy going to less crowded outdoor locations where there is ample space for social distancing. The kite park is one of my favorite destinations.”

Read More
House, Hold - Lois Bielefeld

House, Hold is a collaborative body of work created with my wife, Jackie, during shelter-in-place. Together we made a photograph every day for the month of May, looking at how we negotiate home, our roles, and power at this time. Since 2018, I've been collaborating with others on a series called New Domesticity where I've been making photographs of what home looks like in our current day. Unable to continue that work, I turned the camera inward on my own home and examined all that is quirky, vulnerable, and beautiful within our relationship and domestic space. - Lois Bielefeld

Read More
Girls Can't Skate - Jordana Btp

Girls Can’t Skate spotlights an all-female and non-binary skateboarding community in New York City. By exploring these women’s shared passion and resilience, it celebrates female empowerment in contrast to the machismo culture and normalized violence against women that plagues much of the world. These women are challenging barriers of the traditionally male-dominated sport at a historic moment for skateboarding, which will be part of the next Olympic Games.

Read More
Ariela Subar: Social Distance (a photo project)

Before the world changed, I spent my day-to-day working in professional theatre as a stage manager. The stage manager is the glue between the artists in a production – the one who helps people communicate with one another, the one who provides much of the logistical and emotional support that allows story-telling and art-making to happen. When the pandemic hit and all live entertainment shut down, I was not only suddenly unemployed, but that daily access to story was taken too.

Read More
Frances Bukovsky: Multiple Bodies

My work as a photographer is almost inseparable from my own inner-work. Healing, digging through trauma, and exploring my inner psyche has been made accessible to me by photography, and photography is made possible by the work I do on my own mind and body. As someone who has undergone misguided medical treatment for years and lived within a chronically ill body for my entire life, I have turned to self-portraiture as a way to reclaim my own narrative …

Read More
Anna Rotty: Collapsing the Distance Between Us

“I’ve long explored distance, as well as the limitations of, and possibilities for, connection, intimacy and vulnerability between individuals in relationships. While sheltering in place in Oakland, CA, I began photographing my childhood friend, Lindsay, who lives across the country in Maine. With my camera, through Zoom and our computer screens, I attempt to capture her experience sheltering in place as a new mother feeling confined to a small space both physically and mentally. My hope was to collapse the physical distance between us through mutual conversation and empathy.”

Read More
Titus Brooks Heagins: Racism is a Persistent Infection

“Racism is a persistent infection in the soul of America. No one wants to tackle or confront this malignancy that affects everyone. Yes, everyone. The same issues take the lives of black people as took them in 1619. There have been opportunities to end the less than human treatment of Blacks in America; but each time we reach that precipice, we back away and choose the path of least resistance, and thereby fall back into a hole, a trap that captures and holds hostage our humanity and destroys our Nation bit by bit.”

Read More
Ocean Morisset: Two Pandemics

“We are fighting two pandemics simultaneously: Coronavirus and Racism. The risk we take out in the streets now, fighting for justice is worth the consequences we face. White allies understand that this fight is not about black vs. white, it’s about everyone vs. racists. They have chosen to shed the comforting cloak of comfortability, to join Black people and affirm BLACK LIVES DO MATTER! Black people, who always have to edit and adjust themselves in white spaces for others, have never known this comfort.”

Read More