The most popular Photo of the Day Posts of 2019 include works by legendary photographers such as Duane Michals and the members of Magnum Photos, and new series by emerging photographers such as R...
John Davies's new book shows before and after pictures of industrial landscapes, making a dramatic statement about economics, development and political change. The post Before and After: Photogra...
Christina Seely evokes the disorientating nature of climate change using images that combine science and off-kilter images of Arctic birds, sky and ice. The post A Photographic Climate Change Rid...
Michael Poliza is the first to admit that his new monograph, The World (teNeues, 2019), has an ambitious title. “It is by no means to imply that I have been everywhere and seen everything,” h...
“Of River and Lost Lands” is Sarker Protick’s meditation on the grey, melancholic landscape of the river Padma (Ganges) in Bangladesh. The river is the central character in the story – bu...
In 01:20 (Hatje Cantz, 2019) Bastiaan van Aarle documents the continuous midnight sun in Ólafsfjörður, Iceland, during the month of July. His photographs create a record of one of nature’s s...
Sandra Kantanen studied photography in Helsinki and painting in Beijing. Her award-winning photographs, recently published in the monograph More Landscapes (Hatje Cantz, 2019), have been digitall...
This summer, for the first time, Jackson Fine Art is showing work by Oakland-based artist Terri Loewenthal. In Psychscapes Loewenthal investigates the mythologized mountains, seas, and skies of C...
Roger Palmer’s latest monograph, SPOOR, features color photographs that follow South Africa’s fading railroads. The images, made between 2014 and 2018, were shot in rural areas throughout the...
“Zack Seckler | Above” features aerial photography from Iceland, Botswana and South Africa. The exhibition opens at ClampArt on June 27th. In his mission to capture aerial views of land, se...
Signal Noise by Aaron Rothman is the culmination of a decade of work in the American West. Published by Radius Books, the monograph presents an open-ended meditation on our desire to connect with...
Masao Yamamoto’s latest series, Bonsai, is singularly focused on the tradition of Japanese “tray planting,” a practice of maintaining small trees that mimic the shape and scale of full-size...
Throughout his decades-long career, Thomas Joshua Cooper has made water the focal point of his photographs. Until July 28, nearly 50 of Cooper’s images made along the Eastern seaboard are on vi...
“Ghosts of Segregation,” a series by Richard Frishman, looks at vestiges of America’s racism in the vernacular landscape. Frishman, who says, “the ghosts of segregation haunt us,” talks...
The upcoming book Ganga Ma (GOST, June 2019) is the result of Giulio Di Sturco’s ten-year photographic journey along the Ganges. The project follows the river for over 2500 miles, documenting ...
Sage Sohier’s new series “Immersed & Submerged,” showing April 5 to May 12 at the Foley Gallery, evokes both the quiet solitude and subliminal drama of a particular New Hampshire pond. Phot...
With regular frequency, a group of ten Maine photographers and videographers have been traveling to the Arctic and Antarctic to study, observe, and record the effects of climate change. On Saturd...
Drawing upon the language of 19th century survey photographs, Drew Nikonowicz‘s work investigates the existence and role of a contemporary explorer by combining computer-generated and tradition...
Photography’s relationship to the landscape can be traced to the origins of the medium. The 19th century witnessed a range of approaches, from land surveys that systematically documented the t...
Contemplating the View: American Landscape Photographs at the Addison Gallery of American Art looks at the impulse to creatively portray America’s landscapes. Featuring over 150 photographs ran...