Using a hand held mirror in locations around New York, photographer Stefan Falke invites distant buildings, structures, or other visuals into the main photo to create a viewing experience that requires a second look. His goal is to visually loosen up the obvious, to create images that will surprise and intrigue the viewer, and himself.
Learn MoreRemsen Wolff (1940-1998) was a New York artist and poet who created the “Special Girls – A Celebration” series in the 1990s, featuring portraits of individuals challenging gender from Amsterdam and New York.
“I insist on having their beauty shown,” – Remsen Wolff, 1998.
Learn MoreThe Wild Within brings new life to abandoned architectural spaces.
Learn More“Elements of Wonder: When Nature Becomes Art” invites a slow and attentive way of seeing. These images ask us to pause, to look more deeply, and to remember our place within a living, breathing system far larger than ourselves.
Learn MoreMahnaz and Somayeh Ebrahimi present a vision of survival through art and visual poetry within a context of gender apartheid and extreme living conditions. Their photographs pay homage to Afghan women, transformed into almost mythological figures in a landscape of both hope and turmoil.
Learn MoreBirds of a Feather is an interactive, large-scale outdoor book sculpture that reimagines Claire’s recent photography book. Inspired by the large scale of Audubon’s Elephant Folio, the work takes the familiar intimacy of a book and expands it into an unexpected scaled object designed for collective engagement.
Learn MoreAn immersive container installation that transforms the sea from a site of rupture into a living cosmological archive. Step into the sea as memory, ritual, and ancestral passage.
Learn MoreExploring the strangeness lurking behind the ordinary in everyday life.
Learn MoreAmares Azielos is a collaborative cyanotype project with young migrants in prison, reclaiming visibility, memory, and agency through shared photographic creation and collective authorship.
Learn MoreSheila in Technicolor is my mother in my ear saying, “Don’t you want to add a little color?”—an homage to my mother and acceptance of the colorful life I have had.
Learn MoreKlaus Enrique’s The Arcimboldo Series brings a fantasy back to life.
Learn MoreSelf-taught artist Lauren Camara creates intricate paper-based art inspired by people and their stories, transforming everyday moments into bold, graphic compositions.
Learn MoreWhat we inherit is an artistic exploration of my Japanese heritage using images of kimonos and scrapbooks from the 1930s-60s that I inherited from my grandparents.
Learn MoreThese photocollages explore how memory of my military service experiences, culminating in frustration, anger, and violence, led to emotional withdrawal and physical stress.
Learn MoreThe images in Whilst the world sleeps were created late at night using Play-Doh, an empty wine bottle as a rolling pin, a knife, and a chopping board—they present an alternative and accessible photographic history.
Learn MoreMaterial, by the artist Elizabeth Casasola, won Best Latam Women’s Project 2023 in Enfoque – Conecta Internationalization Platform and Network for Latin American Photography, Bogotá International Festival, Latin American Photography Foundation. It was also exhibited in the Second Javier Ramírez Limón Photography Contest at the Museo de Arte de Sonora.
Learn MoreHome Reimaginings explores how we see/interpret concepts of home.
Learn MoreNature Preserve depicts an imagined paradise filled with beauty and abundance, creating a fantasy of what could be if humans choose not to destroy the Earth’s ecosystems.
Learn MorePresented by Photoville
The Rocketgirl Chronicles is an unintended photography project born during Melbourne’s sixth lockdown, documenting how one child’s imagination helped discover many small worlds around us, while the big world was shut down under the pandemic restrictions.
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