Saturday, April 9, 2016

In Sight: A photographer hung out with the KKK in Tennessee and Maryland. Here's what he saw.

In China, a Buddhist temple helps seniors who have no families; The incredible tale of seven kids who grew up locked in a Manhattan apartment; How one photographer was affected by a four-year journey through the Arab Spring; How one photographer and her partner are recreating the nostalgic beauty of the past on Instagram; In case you missed it: Who’s the most photographed American man of the 19th Century? HINT: It’s not Lincoln…; The plague, alive and well in Madagascar; How does the 1 percent really live? This collection of photos shows us.; The next ‘Blackfish’ controversy may be at Thailand’s Tiger Temple; Once lost to obscurity, this photographer is now a legend;
 
In Sight
A curated view of your world in photographs
 
 
A photographer hung out with the KKK in Tennessee and Maryland. Here’s what he saw.
Photographer Peter van Agtmael goes inside the world of the KKK
In China, a Buddhist temple helps seniors who have no families
The Ji Xiang Buddhist Temple in China's Fujian province runs a nursing home to provide care for seniors who have no family to care for them.
ADVERTISEMENT
 
The incredible tale of seven kids who grew up locked in a Manhattan apartment
Inside the world of the Angulo boys, better known as the "wolfpack." A photography book by Dan Martensen shows the world of the boys who were secluded in a Manhattan apartment growing up, only allowed to leave their apartment between one and nine times a year.
 
How one photographer was affected by a four-year journey through the Arab Spring
Magnum photographer Moises Saman's personal journey through the Arab Spring.
 
How one photographer and her partner are recreating the nostalgic beauty of the past on Instagram
We want to make life more beautiful. It's a simple, declarative statement by Astrid Riecken, a photographer, and her partner, Samantha. They miss the days when people dressed up before they boarded planes or went to dinner or rode the bus into town. They miss the style of the mid-20th century, or earlier, and they …
 
In Case You Missed It
Who’s the most photographed American man of the 19th Century? HINT: It’s not Lincoln…
Frederick Douglass understood and heralded not only the power of the written or spoken word, but also the power of the visual image — especially, his own likeness. As a result, Douglass was photographed more than any other American of his era: 160 distinct images (mostly portraits) have survived, more than Abraham Lincoln at 126.
 
The plague, alive and well in Madagascar
Although it is often thought of as a medieval disease, the plague strikes hundreds of people every year, with its highest concentrations in Madagascar.
 
How does the 1 percent really live? This collection of photos shows us.
A new book looks at the state of global inequality.
 
The next ‘Blackfish’ controversy may be at Thailand’s Tiger Temple
Tiger Temple has been accused of "speed breeding" to inflate the number of cubs for tourists to play with, abusing the animals and of shady dealings on the black market.
 
Once lost to obscurity, this photographer is now a legend
The brilliant photographs of Saul Leiter.
ADVERTISEMENT
 
Recommended for you
 
Travel
A weekly tipsheet for those who love to get away.
Sign Up »
 
     
 
©2016 The Washington Post, 1301 K St NW, Washington DC 20071
 
 
 

No comments:

Post a Comment