Art
Howard Schatz: With Child
Howard Schatz has children to thank for some of his best work.
August Bradley: 99 Faces Of Occupy Wall Street
As the Arab Spring showed us just this last year, communication has become, for all practical purposes, instantaneous.
Gerd Ludwig: Living With Chernobyl
I'm scrolling through a powerful collection of photos on my iPad.
Sanjay Kothari: Shanghai Transformations
The scene is set against the spectacular backdrop of Guilin's karst mountains along the Li River in China.
The Right Resolution
There seems to be some confusion in the industry about how to prepare and optimize image resolution for fine-art printing from modern high-end inkjet printers.
Arny Freytag: Master Of The centerfold
Beginning publication in 1953, Playboy rose to become one of the most iconic magazines and a force that sought to liberate a puritanical America.
Douglas Dubler: Master Of Balletic Motion
Motion and stillness—two elements of the dance that must be carefully balanced and interwoven to create compelling choreography, and that must somehow be captured and expressed in compelling dance photography.
Platon: Master Of The Portrait Of Power
The resulting portraits are respectful, insightful and presented without judgment. He leaves that to the viewer and to history.
Ellen von Unwerth: Master Of Not The Girl Next Door
Ellen von Unwerth knows her way around both sides of a camera.
Pete Souza: Master Of The White house
In 1846, James Polk became the first president to be photographed, but it wasn't until the Kennedy administration that the first official White House photographer was appointed.
Diane Cook And Len Jenshel: Master Of Doubling Up
Photography has its share of artistic tag teams, from the Starn Twins to McDermott & McGough to Kahn & Selesnick.
Michael Clark: Master Of Adventure
Michael Clark wanted to climb mountains and ride bikes and take pictures, so just a year out of college, he left the physics lab and followed his passion.
Douglas Kirkland: Master Of The Parka
Douglas Kirkland is a living legend.
Mike Ruiz: Master Of Hopefulness
Mike Ruiz is a very busy guy.
Angela Marklew: Ahead Of The Curve
At first glance, it seems like any other beauty shot.
Jane Queen: Dangerously Dolly
At 12 years old, Dangerously Dolly, as photographer Jane Queen is most commonly known, began her work in the visual arts by teaching herself how to do digital image manipulation long before she ever picked up a camera.
Ron Haviv: The Impotence Of Authority
Imagine a big-city mayor, the chief executive of a city of more than 1.5 million people, giving an historic speech in front of no one.
Michael Crichton: Kinetic Still Life
Product photography isn't what you'd call exciting. You aren't working with gorgeous models, you aren't traveling the world, and you aren't partying with rock stars.
Michael Kenna: The Photograph As Sense Memory
When Michael Kenna was a boy growing up in the small industrial town of Widnes, England, he hid pieces of paper around his house, his neighborhood and the local park.
Brian DeMint: Deliberate Dissonance
It's suppertime when Brian DeMint returns from his 12-hour swing shift at a rural Missouri power plant—unless, of course, he's working the overnight.
Steve Vaccariello: Classic Perfection
When pro New York- based photographer Steve Vaccariello is asked if there's something about photography that he finds specifically inspiring, he says that he's inspired as an artist not just by imagery, but by life and the beauty that he's able to see...
Caleb Charland: Inquisitive & Blasphemous
Caleb Charland's photographs—which are in no way the product of digital wizardry and entirely the product of a highly creative brain—are the consequence of a formative period in his life during which he was left unattended in a darkroom for extended...
Barbara Davidson: Forgotten Shots
The world that Barbara Davidson has come to know is one that most people don't read, see or hear much about these days.
Jesse Kalisher: World Traveler
Fine-art photography is a tough sell, especially in a tough economy, and Jesse Kalisher has managed to keep himself and his tightly knit staff afloat throughout one of the toughest economies in decades.
Thomas Herbrich: Magic Man
A city is draped in red silk, with gentle waves of fabric spilling over high-rises and trees, and covering the streets.
Yu Tsai: Fearless
Though born in Taiwan and based in the megalopolises of Los Angeles and New York, Yu Tsai’s roots are firmly planted in America’s heartland.
Mike Powell: Grace, Beauty…Action!
An early passion for sports photography led Mike Powell to travel the globe, photographing every major event on the sporting calendar for 25 years. ...
Martin Wonnacott: Cake Factory
This magazine is about pictures and photographers, not photo reps and the agencies they work for. Still, every so often it's good to check in with a rep and discuss the business side of the photo business.
Jake Chessum: Keeping It Light
The key to British-born, New York-based Jake Chessum’s photographic success is his people skills.
Frank Ockenfels: The Great Collaborator
The visual world of Frank Ockenfels doesn’t revolve around the myth of the isolated photographer working alone behind the camera’s viewfinder or staring at a computer monitor.









