Saturday, March 23, 2019

In Sight: The best photos from this week

In Sight
A curated view of your world in photographs

 

 

The Best Photos of the Week

(Jagadeesh Nv/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)
Here are 14 of the week's best photos
Celebrating during the Holi festival in India, the "worm moon", opening of the 'Vessel,' a honeycomb-shaped sculpture in New York, historic flooding in the U.S. Midwest and more images from around the world.

 

 

In Sight

 
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(Vincent Fournier )
Perspective
Vincent Fournier's 'Space Utopia': Space exploration as humanity's great adventure
Vincent Fournier's new book Space Utopia is full of dreamy images that explore human exploration of space. The collection of photographs, made from 2007 to 2017, show space centers and artifacts that were imperative to early trips beyond Earth's atmosphere as well as current progress towards journeys to Mars.
(Toby Binder)
Perspective
As Brexit looms, a photographer seeks to understand the youth culture of Northern Ireland
Toby Binder has been photographing the life of teenagers in the United Kingdom for more than 10 years. Having worked in Britain and Scotland, it was the Brexit referendum that focused his lens on Belfast.
(Chantal Heijnen)
Perspective
An intimate portrait of life in the South Bronx, formed out of an unlikely friendship
After forming an unlikely friendship, photographer Chantal Heijnen spends years photographing a man she and her husband lived with.
 
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Must-see photo stories

(Melina/Mara)
Inside Roseanne Barr's explosive tweet
Barr says she tried apologizing. But ABC had run out of patience.
(Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
His uncle ran a polygamist cult. As his town's first sports star, he provides hope for a new life.
James Jeffs' last name evokes memories of past evil. Through basketball, he's hoping to help bring his community into a more modern world.
(Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Scenes from the Midwest's devastating flooding
The widespread destruction across the Midwest following the "historic" flooding has killed at least four people.
(Evelyn Hockstein/For The Washington Post)
The lottery that's revolutionizing D.C. schools
How a Nobel Prize-winning economist designed an algorithm that changed the course of school choice in D.C.
Their ancestors fled U.S. slavery for Mexico. Now they're looking north again.
Some Mascogos are weighing a return to the nation that enslaved their forebears.
 
 
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