Located in the northern suburbs of Cape Town, Albow Gardens is a block of council housing encircled by a nearly two-metre-high iron fence dividing the community within it from the neighbourhood surrounding it. During Apartheid, these pastel-coloured buildings were used as dormitories by Air Force soldiers at Ysterplaat military base, which borders ......
In direct response to the growing rates of homicide in the United States, Richard Sharum has created a body of work based on the societal implications homicide has on people, both individually and as a group. American Homicide is built in three parts: Families of Victims, Families of Perpetrators, and the lives of Homicide Detectives. Richard ......
An Extremely Un-get-atable Place is a lyrical exploration and re-imagining of the time that George Orwell spent in a remote farmhouse called Barnhill on the Isle of Jura in the Hebrides, Scotland, where between 1946-1949 he lived and wrote his classic dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four.Photographer Craig Easton was invited to stay at Barnhill ......
In this book, photographer Adam Ianniello has documented Angels Point-a park on a cliff's edge that consists of a series of public access paths and asphalt roads alongside the Elysian mountain range on the east side of Los Angeles.
Architecture + Beauty is the second monograph by John Balsom combining the artist's main interests of history, documentary, casting and in the photographer's words, 'graphicness.'
Photographer Andrea Gjestvang journeyed to the Faroe Islands to document the impact of a shortage of women on the territory. Her project, created over 6-years, depicts the traditional man-the Atlantic Cowboy-and the geographical and social periphery he inhabits. Includes an essay by Firouz Gaini.
BANK TOP by photographer Craig Easton examines the representation and misrepresentation of northern communities. The work focuses on a small, tight-knit community in Blackburn, England, which has become synonymous with the use of words like segregation and integration - BBC's Panorama describing it as 'the most segregated town in Britain'.
Through an exploration of iconic Australian events, small towns and his own extended family, Big Sky by Australian photographer Adam Ferguson, attempts to capture a personal vision of Australia that comments on a way of life that is in decline.
Over the course of 10 years, photographer Rocco Rorandelli, travelled to India, China, Indonesia, USA, Germany, Bulgaria, Nigeria, Slovenia and Italy to document the impact of the tobacco industry on health, the economy and the environment.