Saturday, June 11, 2016

In Sight: The arresting beauty of life on a wheat farm in Colorado

See historic photos from legendary and iconic photographer Paul Strand; How the world’s most legendary photo agency is celebrating its 70th year; This Instagram account shatters stereotypes about incarceration; In case you missed it: 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; The brilliant photos of the first American female war photographer killed in action;
 
In Sight
A curated view of your world in photographs
 
 
The arresting beauty of life on a wheat farm in Colorado
Photos of what a deep connection to the earth means to one family on the plains of Colorado.
See historic photos from legendary and iconic photographer Paul Strand
American photographer and filmmaker Paul Strand began photographing in New York in 1910 and ended his career in France in 1976. An exhibition of his work, Paul Strand: Photography and Film for the 20th Century, is currently on display at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London until July 3.
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How the world’s most legendary photo agency is celebrating its 70th year
A look at some iconic images that capture the "decisive moment."
 
This Instagram account shatters stereotypes about incarceration
This Instagram feed tells the stories of convicts – but not always through scenes that you would expect.
 
In Case You Missed It
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.
 
The brilliant photos of the first American female war photographer killed in action
Dickey Chapelle, one of the first female war photographers, risked her life to capture history on world stages from Iwo Jima to the Vietnam War. 
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