All about photo.com: photo contests, photography exhibitions, galleries, photographers, books, schools and venues.

CFEVA at 40: Four Decades of Supporting Contemporary Art

From February 17, 2024 to May 26, 2024
Share
CFEVA at 40: Four Decades of Supporting Contemporary Art
138 S. Pine Street
Doylestown, PA 18901
CFEVA at 40: Four Decades of Supporting Contemporary Art celebrates the 40th anniversary of the Center for Emerging Visual Artists (CFEVA) with an exhibition of work by 40 contemporary artists affiliated with the center who represent the Philadelphia region’s artistic excellence, its legacy, and its future. 

CFEVA was founded in 1983 as a support system for the visual artists of the greater Philadelphia region. Since its inception, the organization has dedicated itself to making artistic practices sustainable, helping artists reach new audiences, and promoting awareness and understanding of visual art among community members. CFEVA’s support of visual artists is critical to maintaining and expanding an equitable and accessible cultural ecosystem, the free exchange of ideas, and the region’s creative economy.

2023 also marks CFEVA’s 40th year of serving artists through its prestigious fellowship program The artist fellows, selected by CFEVA’s Artistic Advisors, go on to shape our region’s cultural community as leaders in the arts. 40 artists have been chosen to represent CFEVA from over 300 fellows whom CFEVA has mentored over four decades and the dozens of established artists who have given their time and talent as advisors, including Mahtab Aslani, Will Barnet (1911-2012), Katie Baldwin, Jill Bell, Henry Bermudez, Rita Bernstein, Tom Birkner, Christina Bothwell, Charles Burwell, Ziui Chen, Donald E. Camp, Anne Canfield, Vincent Desiderio, Amze Emmons, Trey Friedman, Colette Fu, Sophie Glenn, Sidney Goodman (1936-2013), Mary Henderson, Jeff Hurwitz, Leroy Johnson (1937-2022), Mami Kato, Mark Khaisman, Daniel Kornrumpf, Chelsey Luster, Douglas Martenson, Ray K. Metzker (1931-2014), Maggie Mills, Jedediah Morfit, Lydia Panas, Andrea Packard, Serena Perrone, Tim Portlock, Csilla Sadloch, Laurence Salzmann, Julia Stratton, Ron Tarver, Ada Trillo, and Nadia Hironaka & Matthew Suib, with Eugene Lew.

Image: Kitty, Black Tulle, 32 x 40", 2011, from the series Something Like Love © Lydia Panas
Our printed edition showcases the winners of AAP Magazine call of entries
All About Photo Magazine
Issue #41
Stay up-to-date  with call for entries, deadlines and other news about exhibitions, galleries, publications, & special events.

Exhibitions Closing Soon

Views From The Street
Colorado Photographic Arts Center CPAC | Denver, CO
From August 16, 2024 to October 05, 2024
Lisandra Alvarez Valdés, Josh Bergeron, Melissa Breyer, Vanessa Charlot, Farnaz Damnabi, Armando Geneyro, Natela Grigalashvili, Hiroko Hirota, Yojimbo Jack, B Jane Levine, Gulnara Lyabib Samoilova, Anthony Maes, Rudy Ortega, Stephen W. Podrasky, Matthew Steaffens, Jeff Tidwell, Regula Tschumi, and Kenneth Wajda. “Views From the Street” presents a curated group exhibition featuring 18 photographers, including nine local artists from Denver and nine international members of the Women Street Photographers group. Street photography has historically been associated with urban environments like New York City, notably through the work of photographers like Lee Friedlander, Garry Winogrand, Robert Frank, Diane Arbus, and Helen Levitt. Today, the genre remains immensely popular. Advancements in technology, particularly the widespread adoption of smartphones and Internet access, have significantly broadened the definition of “the street.” From Natela Grigalashvili’s quiet depictions of Georgia’s rural Adjara region to Farnaz Damnabi’s poignant portrayal of Iranian women, the exhibit offers insights into varied cultural landscapes. Similarly, the local contributions from Denver photographers such as Rudy Ortega and Josh Bergeron offer fresh interpretations of familiar urban scenes, infused with elements of playfulness and profound observation. While curating this show, I was interested to see these two perspectives – local and global – together in a visual conversation. Like most photographic genres, street photography has been traditionally male-dominated. In recognition of the genre’s traditional gender disparity, we collaborated with Women Street Photographers in New York, to highlight the diverse and compelling perspectives of women photographers worldwide. Each photograph in this exhibition not only captures candid moments of everyday life but also expands the conventional boundaries of street photography, showcasing a heightened spatial awareness and innovative approaches. As articulated by Ana F. Martín in her essay “In Defense of Street Photography,” these images help to remind us that “we are all human, that under our apparent differences we all like to laugh, talk, enjoy the sun and the rain, and everything else that drives us out in the streets to enjoy this life.” Image: Red Orange Glove © B Jane Levine
Peter Knapp: North South East West
Nowhere | New York, NY
From September 05, 2024 to October 06, 2024
Peter Knapp was born on June 5th, 1931, in Bäretswil, Switzerland. He studied at the Kunstgewerbeschule in Zurich, where he was influenced by the thinking and aesthetics of the Bauhaus movement. He learned about the beauty of function and modernity, which he came to expertly demonstrate in his typography, logo work, catalogue and poster design, and scenography. This led him to work, in the 1950s, as art director for the magazine Nouveau Fémina and the Groupe Galeries Lafayette. He subsequently won a competition to design the pavilions for the Brussels World’s Fair in 1956 alongside the Russian designer Slavik. In 1959, the legendary magazine creator Hélène Lazareff recruited Knapp to art direct ELLE, which was then an insurgent, iconoclastic publication on the fashion-magazine scene. Knapp served there until 1966 and then again from 1974 until 1977. During the same years, Knapp also became a photographer in his own right, grafting the Bauhaus tenet of applied art onto the practice of fashion photography in his elegant, expertly composed, and subtly challenging photographs. Fashion photography, when considered an applied art, has interesting links to older forms of expression such as genre painting in Western Europe by artists like Pieter Bruegel and Johannes Vermeer, and Japanese ukiyo-e woodblock prints or paintings. In Japan, these things are considered fuzoku, which refers to customs and manners of daily life (including food, clothing, and housing) that are characteristic of a certain period, society, region, or class. And just as ukiyo-e in Japan and genre paintings in Western Europe are now considered critically important art movements, we should also consider applied fashion photography as a new form of art, and Peter Knapp as one of its foundational practitioners. Image: Stern, 1978, Taroudant, Morocco © Peter Knapp
New Directions: Recent Acquisitions
George Eastman Museum | Rochester, NY
From March 16, 2024 to October 06, 2024
As part of the slate of programs in honor of the 75th anniversary of the public opening of the George Eastman Museum, New Directions: Recent Acquisitions features work acquired by the museum over the past five years and showcases significant developments in photographic practice. The exhibition title echoes New Acquisitions/New Directions/New Work, 1981–1989, organized by curator Robert Sobieszek on what was the museum’s 40th anniversary. Throughout New Directions, the photographic image figures as a tool to fortify—but also unsettle—ideas about history and identity. Performances staged for the camera enable artists to explore and break with the conventions of gender, making the home or studio an experimental theater for engaging the world at large. While some of the artists embrace photography as a documentary medium, others develop strategies to destabilize the authority of the image. Some work to explicitly make visible the myriad ways that the past shapes the present. As instruments of power, archives become platforms to be challenged, subject to reinterpretation and reconfiguration. Found and appropriated materials offer practical, but also critical, approaches to reflecting on contemporary life and the status of images in the digital era. Likewise, recent approaches to the natural environment and the human landscape register the legacies of modern warfare, industrial pollution, and social inequity. Alongside photographs made in the past decade, the exhibition includes works by artists who were often overlooked or marginalized in the past, but whose contributions are touchstones for contemporary art. New Directions also features a selection of photobooks from the museum’s Richard and Ronay Menschel Library. In addition to prints intended for gallery walls, photobooks are a vital way for artists to share their work. In the printed book, an artist can combine and sequence a series of photographs to offer a visual narrative, or they can experiment with printing, layout, or texture. The featured publications take many forms, from traditionally bound pages to more sculptural or even puzzle-like constructions. Photographers and artists in the exhibition include Aaron R. Turner, An-My Lê, Annie Hsiao-Ching Wang, Antony Cairns, Baldwin Lee, Brad Temkin, Curran Hatleberg, David Alekhuogie, Eileen Quinlan, Ephraim Asili, Erica Baum, Frida Orupabo, Ilse Cardoen, Janice Guy, Joan Lyons, Justine Kurland, Keith Smith, Ken Gonzales-Day, Lola Flash, Meghann Riepenhoff, Motoyuki Shitamichi, Penelope Umbrico, Sasha Phyars-Burgess, Sophie Calle, Steffani Jemison, Wyatt Naoki Conlon, and Zanele Muholi. Curated by Phil Taylor and Louis Chavez, Department of Photography.
Dinh Q. Lê: Survey 1998-2023
Shoshana Wayne Gallery | Los Angeles, CA
From August 27, 2024 to October 11, 2024
Shoshana Wayne Gallery is pleased to present Dinh Q. Lê: Survey 1998-2023. This is the artist’s eighth solo exhibition with the gallery, and the gallery’s first posthumous showing of Lê’s work. Survey 1998-2023 serves as a memorial exhibition celebrating Dinh’s life and legacy. The exhibition will be on view August 27th through October 11th. Survey 1998-2023 traces the arc of Lê’s career, beginning with works shown in 1998 at the Los Angeles Center for Photographic Studies and concluding with the artist’s most recent and final works from the Cambodia-Reamker series. Bringing together work from Lê’s series: From Vietnam to Hollywood, Persistence of Memory, A Quagmire This Time, Empire, and Cambodia Reamker, the exhibition foregrounds the artist’s investigations into memory and homeland. It also honors the relationship Dinh had with Shoshana Wayne Gallery, presenting previously exhibited works alongside pieces never shown by the gallery. The main exhibition space features a selection of photo-weaving works by Lê, exemplifying the work he was known for. Inspired by a traditional Vietnamese matmaking technique taught to the artist by his aunt, Lê’s woven works exposed contradictions between American depictions and memories of the Vietnam War, and the lived realities of those who experienced it. By uniting disparate images, Dinh exposed western audiences to the reality of the war (called the American War by the Vietnamese people) and the long shadow it cast over his homeland. Hollywood productions, victims of the Khmer Rouge, and archival images of war are some of the many images Lê mined to force viewers to confront these truths. Survey 1998-2023 is the first exhibition of Lê’s work following his death in April 2024, and it showcases a decades-long relationships between the gallery and the artist. This relationship was cultivated by trips to Vietnam over the years, where Lê shared the beauty and culture of his home country, and a mutual collaboration to found San Art. Dinh was not only an incredible artist, but also an incredible human being. His absence is felt by everyone who had the privilege of knowing him. Dinh Q. Lê has exhibited extensively nationally and internationally at prestigious venues including: Hiroshima Museum of Contemporary Art, Japan; Mori Art Museum, Japan; dOCUMENTA (13), Kassell, Germany; and the Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy. Solo exhibitions include: Projects 93: Dinh Q. Lê (MoMA, New York), True Journey Is Return (San Jose Museum of Art, California), Photographing the thread of memory (Musée du Quai Branly, Paris, France), and Memory for Tomorrow (Mori Art Museum, Tokyo, Japan). His work is in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Israel Museum, Jerusalem; Fukuoka Asian Art and the Mori Museum in Japan; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and Los Angeles County Museum of Art amongst many others. Lê has been the recipient of the Rockefeller Foundation’s Bellagio Residency Award and the Prince Claus Fund for Cultural and Development amongst others.
Aline Smithson Selects 2024
Atlanta Photography Group Gallery | Atlanta, GA
From September 14, 2024 to October 12, 2024
This exhibition, juried by Aline Smithson, Founder and Editor-in-Chief, Lenscratch, is an open-themed showcase that celebrates the diverse world of fine art photography, encompassing a wide range of subjects, cultures, and the global landscape. In the selection process, our juror considered how the images worked in conversation with one another. She worked through 634 images submitted by 125 artists to choose 50 for Aline Smithson Selects 2024. This is the second year for the APG/Museum of Fine Arts, Houston Purchase Award, a $3,000 prize which is made possible through a generous grant from Edwin Robinson and Julin Maloof, in honor of Gloria and Ted Maloof. This is a great opportunity for artists to premier photography gallery in Atlanta and the Southeast, and to be considered by Lisa Volpe, Curator of Photography at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston for the museum purchase award. Aline Smithson is an interdisciplinary artist, editor, filmmaker, and educator based in Los Angeles, California. Best known for her conceptual portraiture and a practice that uses humor and pathos to explore the performative potential of photography. Growing up in the shadow of Hollywood, her work is influenced by the elevated unreal. She received a BA in Art from the University of California at Santa Barbara and was accepted into the College of Creative Studies, studying under artists such as William Wegman, Allen Rupersburg, and Charles Garabedian. After a career as a New York Fashion Editor working alongside some the greats of fashion photography, Smithson returned to Los Angeles and her own artistic practice. She has exhibited widely including over 40 solo shows at institutions such as the Griffin Museum of Photography, the Fort Collins Museum of Contemporary Art, the Shanghai, Lishui, and Pingyqo Festivals in China, The Rayko Photo Center in San Francisco, the Center of Fine Art Photography in Colorado, the Tagomago Gallery in Barcelona and Paris, and the Arnika Dawkins Gallery in Atlanta. In addition, her work has been featured in numerous publications including The New York Times, The New Yorker, PDN (cover), the PDN Photo Annual, Communication Arts Photo Annual, Harper’s, Eyemazing, Soura, Visura, Shots, Pozytyw, and Silvershotz magazines. Smithson is the Founder and Editor- in-Chief of Lenscratch, a daily journal on photography. She has been an educator at the Los Angeles Center of Photography since 2001 and her teaching spans the globe. In 2012, Smithson received the Rising Star Award through the Griffin Museum of Photography for her contributions to the photographic community and also she received the prestigious Excellence in Teaching Award from CENTER. In 2014 and 2019, Smithson’s work was selected for the Critical Mass Top 50. Her work is held in significant public collections including the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, the Crocker Art Museum, and the Santa Barbara Art Museum. In 2015, the Magenta Foundation published her first significant monograph, Self & Others: Portrait as Autobiography. In 2016, the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum commissioned Smithson to create a series of portraits for the upcoming Faces of Our Planet Exhibition. In the Fall of 2018 and again in 2019, her work was selected as a finalist in the Taylor Wessing Portrait Prize and exhibited at the National Portrait Gallery in London. In 2019, Kris Graves Projects commissioned her to create the book LOST II: Los Angeles that is now sold out. Peanut Press Books published her monograph, Fugue State, in Fall 2021. Her books are in the collections of the Getty Museum, the Los Angeles Contemporary Art Museum, the National Portrait Gallery, London, the Metropolitan Museum, the Guggenheim, the Museum of Modern Art, among others. In 2022, she was honored to be a Hasselblad Heroine. With the exception of her cell phone, she only shoots film. Image: © Linda Plaisted
Mona Kuhn : The Schindler House, A Love Affair
Galerie XII | Los Angeles, CA
From September 07, 2024 to October 12, 2024
The enigmatic subject of Kuhn’s series is an imagined, ethereal figure inspired by a letter from the famed architect R.M. Schindler to a mysterious lover. Shot in the 1920s modernist house designed and built by Schindler on Kings Road in West Hollywood, each portrait is solarized, a technique favored by master surrealists in the 1920s, including Lee Miller and Man Ray. The resulting impressionistic images question the very nature of lyrical fiction and photography as a record, capturing the physical presence of this mysterious woman even as it appears to dematerialize
Myths, Secrets, Lies, and Truths: Photography from the Doug McCraw Collection
Boca Raton Museum of Art | Boca Raton, FL
From June 12, 2024 to October 13, 2024
Sheila Pree Bright, Liesa Cole, Hank Willis Thomas, Karen Graffeo, Spider Martin From the Collection of Doug McCraw This exhibition explores the complexities of human existence through the interplay of myths, secrets, lies, and truths through the lens of five brilliant artists from Doug McCraw's collection. Hank Willis Thomas, Spider Martin, Sheila Pree Bright, Liesa Cole, and Karen Graffeo capture moments that transcend the ordinary, reveal truths, and explore how myths shape our perceptions, how secrets veil the truth, and how lies distort our beliefs. Hank Willis Thomas' Unbranded is a series depicting years of advertisements created by white ad executives for the Black consumer market that are full of myth, disrespect, disinformation, and, in some cases, outright racism. Spider Martin's iconic photographs from the 1965 Selma to Montgomery March documented protests by African Americans demanding the right to vote. Martin enlarged the three photos featured in the exhibition to express the drama of this critical historical moment. They are part of a series of enlarged photographs titled Selma Is Now. Sheila Pree Bright presents works from her powerful Young Americans series in which she photographed her subjects posing with the American flag while recording what they say the flag means to them. Liesa Cole’s photographs, projections, and installation are about those who share secrets and those who keep them. Most people are uncomfortable sharing secrets unless they know they can trust someone to keep their confidence. In the exhibition, visitors will hear anonymous people telling secrets that can be funny, tragic, ridiculous, surprising, or raw and visceral. Karen Graffeo’s Cuba series is part of an ongoing project expressing the beauty and inventiveness of a culture experiencing many challenges, hardships, and poverty. She photographs moments of everyday life in Cuba with an eye to the vibrant designs, colors, patterns, and textures that reflect the unique spirit and aesthetics of the island nation. In 2013 she was awarded a Fulbright Senior Scholar appointment in Romania and in 2014 she received a Tanne Foundation award for her humanitarian work. Myths, Secrets, Lies, and Truths is a thought-provoking and transformative exhibition that challenges and inspires us to seek deeper truths in our world.. Image: Miss. Anita, 2019 © Liesa Cole
Kristine Potter: Dark Waters
The Momentary | Bentonville, AR
From May 11, 2024 to October 13, 2024
In Dark Waters, a tour de force of Southern Gothic Noir, Kristine Potter reinvents a centuries-old genre with coolness and clarity. With this recent collection of seductive and darkly brooding photographs, Potter reflects on the Southern Gothic mythos found in the popular imagination of “murder ballads”— traditional songs from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries that often end in death and despair. Her richly detailed black-and-white images channel the setting and characters of these songs, capturing the landscape of the American South and creating portraits that stand in for the oft-unnamed women at the center of their stories. In doing so, she both evokes and exorcizes the ambient sense of threat that women often grapple with as they move through the world.
Earthly Delights
Koslov Larsen Gallery | Houston, TX
From September 06, 2024 to October 18, 2024
Koslov Larsen is pleased to present a group show for the commencement of the fall art gallery season. Earthly Delights walks us down a path of fantasy and fiction, through the winding walkways of the mind and out into the sun of a world crafted by imagination. This exhibition largely centers on the Fantastical Feasts by Claire Rosen, a series of whimsical panoramic photographs depicting animals reveling around elaborate banquet tables, visually inspired by the Dutch Masters and Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper. From honeybees to hedgehogs to elephants, photographed across the world in collaboration with nature preserves and animal rescues, the images communicate a sense of humanity intrinsic in nature, a peculiar and yet profound kinship. “The feasts invite the viewers to reflect on the nature of society, our relationship and responsibility to the creatures we share the planet with.” Each staged image captures a magical moment which, while rooted firmly in reality, transports us directly into the realm of imagination. Rosen’s Fantastical Feasts series was exhibited earlier this year at AIPAD’s The Photography Show in New York City where it captured the attention of critics and collectors alike to much acclaim. The works were concurrently curated into the second edition of AIPAD’s Monumental exhibition. Also included in Earthly Delights is the work of Amanda Marchand, Torrie Groening, Margeaux Walter, and Kelda Van Patten. Marchand breaks nature down into its most abstracted forms through constructed lumen prints, exploring the relationship between endangered flora and fauna and humanity’s mark on time. Margeaux Walter’s playful trompe l’œil engages the viewer in staged, site-specific installations in the environment which toe the line between what is real and what is constructed and sensationalized, echoing a similar dissonance found in our current political and social landscape. Van Patten’s constructed photographs take us through layers of time and intervention, occupying a liminal space between artifice and truth as we delve through the many stages of physical and digital processing to arrive at a “final” image in a permanent state of suspense. Groening creates scenes of self-contradiction, bite-sized worlds which compel questioning and inspire fantasy. Throughout the exhibition, we find tension between that which is apparent and that which lies below the surface, scratching at the edges of our comprehension and animating limitless possibilities. Earthly Delights beckons us into a world which we will surely emerge from changed. Image: Cumulus © Margeaux Walter
Nicole Cohen: Super Vision
Paul W. Zuccaire Gallery | Stony Brook, NY
From July 18, 2024 to October 18, 2024
NICOLE COHEN: SUPER VISION features videos and photo-collages that explore perception as viewed through interior spaces and architectural environments. Cohen’s work often overlays past and present imagery, including vintage magazine pages, domestic interiors, period rooms, historical paintings and iconic architectural spaces, to comment on socially constructed space. Using video to transform and alter interior spaces, she delves into ideas of perception, surveillance and the physical experience of immersion. Her work is positioned at the crossroads of contemporary reality, personal fantasy and altered spaces. SUPER VISION presents work from major projects over the last 20 years including: Contemporary Art Books & New York Public LIbrary, Time Lapse, five small video projections, a group of photographs from the Vintage Project series, several Vintage Collage works, a selection of Intervention videos and a new installation piece. Nicole Cohen is an internationally-renowned installation artist who works with video and new media. Cohen received her BA from Hampshire College and her MFA from the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. She has exhibited at the Brooklyn Museum of Art, Los Angeles County of Art, Williams College Museum of Art, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Shoshana Wayne Gallery, La B.A.N.K Galerie, Paris, the Autostadt, Wolfsburg, Schloss Britz in Berlin, Germany, American University Museum at Katzen Art Center in Washington D.C., Wave Hill in the Bronx, and The Museum of the Moving Image. Her work is in the permanent collections of U.S. Art in Embassies Collection, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Williams College Museum, The Pacific Design Center in West Hollywood, CA, Cedar Sinai Hospital, and others. Image: Amazon Woman, 2022 © Nicole Cohen
Nan Goldin: You never did anything wrong
Gagosian Gallery | New York, NY
From September 12, 2024 to October 19, 2024
Gagosian is pleased to announce Nan Goldin: You never did anything wrong at 522 West 21st Street, New York. Opening on September 12, the exhibition consists of two new moving-image works presented in specially designed pavilions and an extensive body of new photographs. This is Goldin’s first exhibition of new work since joining Gagosian in 2023. Stendhal Syndrome (2024) is a moving-image work, with a score composed by Soundwalk Collective, that juxtaposes photographs Goldin has taken over the last twenty years of Classical, Renaissance, and Baroque masterpieces with portraits of her own friends, family, and lovers. Photographs of paintings and sculptures from museums around the world including the Galleria Borghese, Louvre, Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Prado flow seamlessly with images of Goldin’s community, crossing centuries to resonate in harmony with each other, revealing uncanny resemblances in composition, color, form, and emotional tone. Goldin’s ability to draw such precise visual connections raises profound questions about traditional hierarchies within art, and the enduring human compulsion to memorialize beauty in works fueled by love, and grief. You never did anything wrong, Part 1 (2024) is a home movie centered around the totality of the solar eclipse, filmed in Super 8 and 16mm. The soundtrack includes a mournful piece by Valerij Fedorenko, a chilling new score composed by Mica Levi, and ambient sounds of nature recorded during the eclipse. It is Goldin’s first abstract work, born from an ancient myth that an eclipse is caused by animals stealing the sun. The moving-image works are projected within freestanding pavilions designed by Goldin in collaboration with Lebanese-French architect Hala Wardé. Each structure is conceived to echo the corresponding film therein, creating a Gesamtkunstwerk that fuses architecture, image, and sound. Drawing from the same associative impulse that informed Stendhal Syndrome, Goldin created an expansive body of new grid photographs in which her own autobiographical images are mirrored by photographs taken in museums of artworks spanning millennia. The grid format, which has been a key element of Goldin’s work for three decades, echoes the cinematic structure of her moving-image works, encapsulating her understanding of history and time. These photographs line the walls of the gallery, surrounding the pavilions. Many of the grids explore stories of love and loss from antiquity, as in Orpheus Dying (2024), in which an 1866 Baroque painting by Émile Lévy of Orpheus is paired with a 1977 photograph of Goldin’s lover Tony. The visual parallels are striking, as both figures lie in nearly identical, seductive positions. Their pronounced rib cages create a haunting symmetry, and both bodies are draped against rumpled blue sheets that further unify the images, despite one being a classical nude and the other of a modern man wearing jeans. The shared palette and eerie shadowing of the two scenes blur the lines between past and present, high art and personal narrative, making their connection almost surreal—and evoking the pleasure and terror of the Stendhal Syndrome. Throughout her storied fifty-year career, Goldin has fearlessly probed the depths of the human condition, capturing raw moments from everyday life that reveal universal experiences of love, loss, and the truths that connect us all. Image: Hermaphroditus, 2024 © Nan Goldin
Out the E by Harlan Bozeman
Filter Photo | Chicago, IL
From September 06, 2024 to October 19, 2024
In conjunction with the 2024 Filter Photo Festival, Filter Photo is pleased to present, Out the E, a solo exhibition of work by Harlan Bozeman. Out the E is a photographic project about the rural Arkansas Delta town of Elaine. In 1919, as cotton prices skyrocketed, Black sharecroppers—trapped in a vortex of debt and underpayment—began to organize for better conditions and fair payment. On September 30, a meeting of these farmers was disrupted by several white men, one of whom was killed. Hours later, spurred on by a “Black insurrection,” a white mob—including federal troops—descended on the area. Two days later, more than 500 Black people were killed in what is considered to be the deadliest racial conflict in the U.S. In Elaine today, there are some who don’t want to remember the events that began that day in 1919. There are others who have to talk about it. And there are others still, who believe it never happened. The racial divide is as strong as ever in Elaine, creating a culture of silence and negligence in this small community that has yet to truly heal. Law and way of life operate differently in this region and more than a century later, most of the town’s black residents live in a familiar cycle where they lack sufficient resources. In 2005, the town’s school district closed, forcing children to attend school in a town about an hour away. Arkansas Public Schools do not teach students about the Elaine massacre, leaving a majority of children without the knowledge of this tragedy that occurred in their own town. Having a taxable job forces you to lose government assistance, and government assistance prevents you from getting above the poverty line. The only employment opportunities in Elaine are a few local businesses or working on soybean farms, and the farming jobs tend to be offered exclusively to white people. To make money or discover opportunities, you have to leave. As more Americans are grappling with the country’s history of extracting wealth and resources from Black communities, Out the E is necessary to bring attention to a town and community that has long been forgotten.
Advertisement
AAP Magazine #43: Colors
Win a Solo Exhibition in November
Photographer of the Week
Call for Entries
AAP Magazine #43 Colors
Publish your work in AAP Magazine and win $1,000 Cash Prizes

Related Articles

Raymond Meeks: ’The Inhabitants’ at the Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson
Raymond Meeks, the sixth laureate of Immersion from the Fondation d’entreprise Hermès, presents his photographic series "The Inhabitants" at the Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson, Paris, from October 9, 2024 to January 5, 2025. Curated by Clément Chéroux, Director of the Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson
The Analog Chronicles
A collective exhibition by Mathias Depardon, Ismail Ferdous, Théo Giacometti, Gaia Squarci, and Alessandro Silvestri. On view at the 99 Cameras Museum in Studio Harcourt, Paris From November 6, 2024 to February 15, 2025
Christian Voigt: LUNAR
Wanrooij Gallery in Amsterdam is pleased to announce a solo exhibition by the German fine art photographer Christian Voigt from 25 October 2024 until 25 January 2025. The gallery presents a stunning selection of his new LUNAR series. Iconic spacesuits and technical marvels from the USA and Russia are portrayed in a previously unseen way of poetic quality. The fascinating, large-format photographs show the objects against a black background, as if they were situated in the absolute silence of space, conveying both the loneliness and the immense vastness of the cosmos.
A first look at Photo Fringe 2024 - Common Ground
The biennial, open-platform photography festival returns in October with six weeks of exhibitions and events in and beyond Brighton & Hove, Newhaven and for the first time, Portsmouth.
The Echo of Our Voices by Nick Brandt
THE ECHO OF OUR VOICES is the fourth Chapter of The Day May Break, a global series featuring first humans and animals, and now just humans, impacted by climate change and environmental degradation and destruction.
Luigi Ghirri: Viaggi Photographs 1970-1991
Just over thirty years after his untimely death, MASI Lugano, in Switzerland, is devoting a major show to the Italian photographer Luigi Ghirri (Scandiano, 1943 - Reggio Emilia, 1992). Ghirri was a pioneer whose far-reaching ideas on photography and its role in modern culture remain influential today. The body of work he created in the 1970s and 1980s - a playful and poetic reflection on the medium of photography at a time when it was becoming commonplace in contemporary society - was unrivaled in Europe. The exhibition in MASI explores how important the idea and reality of travel was to Ghirri. A carefully curated selection of around 140 colour photographs, mostly vintage prints from the 1970s and 1980s from the Estate of Luigi Ghirri and the collection of CSAC in Parma, brings together celebrated images alongside lesser known photographs.
Steven Seidenberg exhibits ’The Architecture of Silence’ at Unseen Amsterdam with Albumen Gallery
Lens-based artist and writer Steven Seidenberg exhibits photographs from his series and book, The Architecture of Silence: Abandoned Lives of the Italian South (published by Contrasto Books), with Albumen Gallery for Unseen Amsterdam, on view September 19 – 22, 2024.
Denver Art Museum presents Dawoud Bey: Street Portraits
The Denver Art Museum (DAM) is proud to present Dawoud Bey: Street Portraits, featuring 38 portraits by celebrated photographer and 2017 MacArthur Fellow Dawoud Bey (American, born 1953).
All About Photo Presents ’Lost America’ by Matthew Portch
Lost America examines a quiet stillness in a forgotten landscape that is, in a sense, ‘on pause’. Backwater towns and rural corners are juxtaposed with the ambiguity of detached suburbia. Places appear frozen in time, their inhabitants absent or long since departed. Ardently stagnant in appearance, the spaces yearn to instil a melancholic feeling of familiarity. One might not notice the scenes when viewed within the vast stretch of America’s panorama. Yet, framed as a vignette, each could appear to echo a moment of mournful reverie and reflective contemplation.
Call for Entries
AAP Magazine #43 Colors
Publish your work in AAP Magazine and win $1,000 Cash Prizes