The over 140 images in the book-some rarely published or previously unseen-were edited by McCullin through the process of revisiting his archives and reassessing photographs made from the late 1950s until last year.
Twenty-five years ago, Don McCullin embarked on a journey to create a cultural and architectural survey of the remains of the Roman Empire. The photographs in his forthcoming book—The Roman Conceit..
Photographs of contemporary Veles are intertwined with fragments from an archaeological discovery also called 'the Book of Veles' - a cryptic collection of 40 'ancient' wooden boards discovered in Russia in 1919, written in a proto-Slavic language.
The History War is a book of photographs, collages and ephemera beginning with a timeline that starts in the 5th century.It's six chapters document the Maidan uprising, the Chernobyl wasteland where Soviets began to lose faith in the system, the eastern Donbass of neglected coal miners and de-occupied ruins, an embed with the Ukrainian Army, the ......
The Makeshift City is compiled of photographs made in and around Atlanta, Georgia.The city of Atlanta is currently in the midst of a seismic shift of population growth, real estate development and economic disparity that follows decades of systemic racism and Jim Crow policies that have plagued the American South since the Civil War. Atlanta is a ......
He created the images using two analogue processes, one with a paper negative, the other produced using a complex colour-reversal process. 'These are representations of flowers, of course, but they are also signs of a complex improvisation with chemicals, paper, light, and time. I do not know what the image is going to be like at the start of the ......
The publication of Frontier comes at a time when aspects of everyday life- air conditioning, desk jobs, lack of access to nature and the reliance on the motor car-increase mans divorce from this way of life.
This new book presents a typology of 100 portraits of households in Newcastle, New South Wales taken in 2020 during some of the strictest COVID-19 lockdowns in the world. The restrictions allowed photographer Luke David Kellett a unique opportunity compile a visual representation of architecture and inhabitants of Newcastle.
Features of these training environments included costumed role-players, elaborate Hollywood-inspired sets and staged tableaus hinting at the imagined lives of far-away people. Those portrayed in the photographs include military personnel-often combat veterans playing the role of enemy combatants-immigrants from Iraq or Afghanistan intended to make ......