Thembinkosi Hlatshwayo’s experimental, multilayered images invoke the chance gestures and social life of taverns in Johannesburg.
Nathan Beard’s intimate portraits and embellished images challenge received notions of Thai cultural identity—and its representation in museums.
Blake Jacobsen’s images of family life and hair-care rituals offer a quiet rumination on queerness, masculinity, and working-class labor.
In 2021, Charles Thiefaine began photographing the Indian Ocean island of Socotra, capturing the seeming bliss of the landscape amid the backdrop of political conflict.
Ashley Markle’s compelling images of her mother and stepfather reveal the intricate dynamics of family relationships.
Combining portraits, archival images, and digital experiments, Devashish Gaur reanimates a nostalgic history of his family’s domestic relationships.
Against the backdrop of epic history and contemporary migration, Massao Mascaro’s poetic black-and-white images consider the lives and landscapes of Southern Europe.
Tirtha Lawati’s portraits of his family’s life during COVID-19 offer a playful, tender depiction of home and cultural belonging.
In their portraits in the American West, Evan Benally Atwood builds a vibrant narrative about trans and Native lives.
Juan Orrantia’s photographs achieve a vivid punch through the seven-color printing process known as heptachrome.
Dean Majd’s images of skaters and artists portray the joys and trials of young New Yorkers.
For Mengwen Cao, who came out to their parents on FaceTime, images anchor queer life in everyday spaces.
After moving from New York to Atlanta, Nydia Blas adopts a magical outlook as a tool for resilience.
Res searches for bonds between people, from the family household to community protest.
Since 2004, the Chinese photographer has captured the displacement of over a million people caused by the Three Gorges Dam.
In Venezuela, a photographer finds spontaneous grief and joy in everyday life.
Years after the South African photographer’s sister mysteriously disappeared, his images become a public record of a private myth.
Against the backdrop of the US presidential election, a photographer documents growing cultural tensions in the Pacific Northwest’s rural communities.
Fall 2022, “The Seventieth Anniversary Issue”