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40 votes
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Swedish photographer Lars Tunbjörk documented remarkably dreary corporate spaces – his images should remind us that it didn't have to be this way
23 votes -
Photographer disqualified from AI image contest after winning with real photo
37 votes -
World Press Photo 2024 – global winners
9 votes -
Inuuteq Storch – who is the first Kaalaleq/Inuit artist to have a solo exhibition at the Venice Biennale – aims to capture ‘the Greenlandic everyday’
9 votes -
World Nature Photography Awards 2024 winners
29 votes -
Framing everyday life with Ryutaro Nakamoto
4 votes -
Getty Images to debut its own AI image generator which will be trained on Getty’s own data
16 votes -
Award winning photojournalist James Nachtwey holds retrospective exhibition in Thailand
2 votes -
Winners: Australian Geographic Nature Photographer of the Year
18 votes -
French photographer Romain Veillon is making it his mission to capture in pictures the potential result of a planet without people
10 votes -
Known for photographs showing hundreds of naked people posing in a wide variety of environments, US artist Spencer Tunick has gathered thousands to pose naked in Finland
16 votes -
The 2023 Audubon Photography Awards: Winners and honorable mentions
16 votes -
Drone Photo Award winners capture the extraordinary beauty of the ordinary
14 votes -
Shooting 35mm film inside Polaroid cameras
5 votes -
Jerry Uelsmann, the artist who turned photography upside down
5 votes -
What is your philosophy on photography?
Photography is a bit of an odd form of art, especially if you're not doing anything 'weird' with it. Occasionally I'll be thinking about photography as a hobby and a bit of dread sets in about how...
Photography is a bit of an odd form of art, especially if you're not doing anything 'weird' with it. Occasionally I'll be thinking about photography as a hobby and a bit of dread sets in about how every photograph I could think of has already been taken and done better than I could. And so I think, what is the point? Why do I enjoy photography?
So, after a few highly coherent 3am thinking sessions, I have come to my conclusion. My "philosophy", if you can call it that, behind why I enjoy photography is that I use it as a way to appreciate what I see and the world around me. I don't consider myself an artist because I just use photography as a way to display something beautiful that already existed. (Not that I don't consider other photographers who do similar stuff to me artists, that's just how I view myself.)
If there are any other photographers on here, amateur or professional, I am interested in hearing your beliefs and what meaning you put towards your photography, whether its general or for specific photos.
10 votes -
The landscape photographer who hates the sky
6 votes -
Andy’s Pop Life - Revisiting Steve Schapiro’s historic 1965 visit to Andy Warhol’s Factory and his travels across the US with a cadre of Superstars
2 votes -
How this artist makes perfect clouds indoors
8 votes -
The superheroes of beautiful Kinshasa
3 votes -
Northern lights photographer of the year 2022 – in pictures
2 votes -
Zizipho Poswa’s new ceramics and photography explore hair as a medium for sculpture
1 vote -
Use these tips to take an amazing science photograph
5 votes -
See the buzzworthy winners of the Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition
7 votes -
Why dark and light is complicated in photographs
5 votes -
Views of Iceland in February – Nacho Doce, a photographer with Reuters, spent the past few weeks traveling across the country
3 votes -
The first standard to assure a photo’s authenticity has been created
7 votes -
Native Americans: Portraits from a century ago
11 votes -
The sticky issue of consent in street photography
11 votes -
An uncomfortable monkey and some singing fish star in Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards 2021
8 votes -
Drawing with light: How photos were made a century ago
6 votes -
Diorama Map - Sohei Nishino
4 votes -
Images from a changing Iceland – the landscape is undergoing constant change, and the rate of that change is being accelerated by global warming
9 votes -
From the 1910s to the 1930s, John Alinder portrayed the local people of rural Sweden, the landscape around them and their way of life
12 votes -
Photography of Lauren Tepfer
5 votes -
Winners of the close-up photography contest
9 votes -
John Waters bequeaths his art collection to Baltimore Museum of Art, whose bathrooms will be named in his honor
13 votes -
Winners of 2020 Drone Photo Awards
12 votes -
Woman's photoshoot of her dogs goes hilariously wrong
8 votes -
Comedy Wildlife Photography - 2020 finalists
17 votes -
How to use lighting and angles to take better bird photos
8 votes -
Living tree bridges in a land of clouds – photos
5 votes -
Milk (breastfeeding)
14 votes -
Helsinki Photo Festival – Fifty-eight international and Nordic photographers displayed in venues across the city; the overall theme for the festival is trust
5 votes -
“Representation matters!”: Adam Perez on the empowering feeling of seeing yourself in an image
6 votes -
Days of Night/Nights of Day
6 votes -
In Iran, isolated musicians perform from rooftops
6 votes -
The great empty
5 votes -
Ville Lenkkeri – The Sacrifice Of A Sacred Tree (2013)
4 votes