Dorothea Lange’s Pioneering Approach to Portraiture
Dorothea Lange's profound impact on documentary photography and portraiture is indisputable, as her work transcended the confines of mere images to become a vehicle...
Photographer Paul Dubotzki in Australia’s WWI Internment Camps
In the annals of history, amidst the tumult of World War I, one man's journey through the lens would not only document the human...
The Kiss in Times Square photograph by Alfred Eisenstaedt
"The Kiss" photograph, captured by Alfred Eisenstaedt, is one of the most iconic images in the history of photography. Taken on August 14, 1945,...
The artists from Belleville, Gainsbourg & Piaf
The artists from Belleville include Edith Piaf and Maurice Chevalier who debuted at La Java jazz club and Serge Gainsbourg spent a lot of...
Sebastião Salgado lens on Humanity’s Struggle and Resilience
Photography has the power to transcend boundaries, evoke emotions, and tell stories that words alone cannot convey. In the realm of documentary photography, one...
Professional Photography in the Digital Era
After the end of professional photography during the transition to digital the common pyramid where 10% of people earn 90% of the money in...
Navigating the Future of Professional Photography
Before coming to conclusions about the future of work in photography, the future depends on the individual and there is no shortage of young...
How Getty Images & Disruptors Changed Photography
After a decade of massive change, the 1990s ended with the world passing through the Millennial, and Getty Images storming the scene, disrupting the...
Covid anti-vaccine pass sanitaire Paris protest
As the world locked down to prevent the spread of the Covid-19 virus, I headed to live in one of the most densely populated...
Gregory Halpern “between the documentary and fine art”
During the Magnum-Speos Documentary & Photojournalism class, 2021, students were asked to present their analysis of a Magnum photographer. Analysis by Mark Anning of Gregory Halpern, as much as possible in his own words ...