The Urban Vernacular
Capturing the everyday landscape, Vishal Marapon’s images connect with changing cities and the material effects of gentrification and development.
Capturing the everyday landscape, Vishal Marapon’s images connect with changing cities and the material effects of gentrification and development.
Iconic work by Stephen Shore is highlighted as part of Edwynn Houk Gallery’s Summer Show, which delves into a diverse collection.
Aesthetica selects five must-see photography exhibitions open 28-29 July. Each offers conceptual responses to contemporary life.
Polaroid Originals’ summer campaign offers bold colours and clean lines, evoking a sense of freedom and creativity.
Delving into the archives, Changes at Staley-Wise Gallery, New York, charts the development of 20th century photography.
Brilliant City at David Zwirner, Hong Kong investigates the density of the metropolis through manipulated compositions.
Exhibitions at The Hepworth, Wakefield, and the Getty Center, Los Angeles, showcase work that occupies the boundary between fashion and fine art.
A new show at Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco, examines the poetic nature of roads through photographs by Robert Adams.
Nothing Stable Under Heaven features works by 25 artists drawn from SFMOMA’s contemporary collection focusing on social and political resistance.
The 20 photographers featured in Made in Berlin at CAMERAWORK draw a striking portrait of the cultural centre through a variety of styles.
Gail Albert Halaban’s large-scale, stylised works possess a dark and cinematic sense of voyeurism, addressing themes of 21st century disconnection.
Anthropocene at Art Gallery of Ontario brings together science and art, unearthing the scale of industrial activity on the planet.
An exhibition at Museum of Fine Arts, Petersburgh, examines how photographers capture and rewrite notions of identity.
Harry Gruyaert offers a striking synthesis of colour, form and light, bringing together fragments of the everyday.
Lonneke van der Palen’s practice focuses on creating artificial sets. Highly stylised, the images focus on nature of circulated media and constructed realities.
Berenice Abbott’s works represent a community in flux, documenting New York’s changing landscape through light and form.
The relationship between humans and the natural landscape is constantly shifting. A show responds to these changing dialogues.
From UK beaches to Latin and Central America, must-see exhibitions open 21-22 July are defined by a sense of place and local identity.
Artificial Intelligence has the potential to transform everything we do. Huawei launches the world’s first photography award judged by AI.