Sort this listing by: Date | Popularity | Alphabetically
|
The Black HouseOne of the most explosive photography projects of the 1970s was a series shot by Colin Jones for the "London Sunday Times". The pictures record life at the Harambee Project, a hostel for troubled black youth in Holloway, north London, which became known to its residents as The Black House. Appearing for the first time in book form, these images are no less haunting today than they were nearly thirty years ago. In rich duotone, they capture the dignity and fierce beauty of a community shunned by ... |
|
Black in AmericaPhotographer Eli Reed documents the black experience in America, from tender moments between parents and children and the deceptive innocence of rural life, to the tensions of the urban drug scene. His work seeks to show the truth, in images of black America pictured with anger and compassion.... |
|
Black September to Desert Storm: A Journalist in the Middle EastThis text offers an insight into the efforts endured by journalists covering stories for newspapers and magazines. For more than 20 years, Claude Salhani travelled throughout the often volatile Middle East as a photojournalist and reporter, in search of the region's biggest stories. Wars, terrorist acts, demonstrations by religious extremists and the flight of refugees were among the events he witnessed. From exclusive travels with former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger to intimate moments... |
|
Black SmokeUntil the 1960s, coal dominated life in Germany and the Netherlands in a way that future generations could hardly imagine. Coal was everywhere: belowground, on waterways, in the air, in the home--and thus, of course, in photographs. Few subjects have lent themselves so convincingly to the photographic medium as the universe of miners, mountains of coal, and its transport. Black Smoke reveals the visual virtuosity inspired by the coal mines of Germany and the Netherlands. The unique, sometimes bi... |
|
Black Star: Sixty Years of Photojournalism: 60 Years of Photojournalism/English, French, & GermanBlack Star's catalogue of photos reflects the diversty of themes found in the history of photojournalism: from the International Brigade of the Spanish civil war to the misery of Rwandan refugees in a Zairean camp; from the Stone Age tribes living in the Philippine rain forest to the criminal gangs in the jungle of Los Angeles. Black Star's immortal photographs rage from a tramp sleeping on a Parisian shop window ledge to the back rooms of the Bank of England. No journey was too long or too ardu... |
|
Black Taxi: Shooting South Africa... |
|
BlackfaceOf all of David Levinthal's previous series of photographs, none is more challenging and provocative than his Blackface series, created over the previous three years. Levinthal has used his toy collection to question national myths, our childhood dreams, and the stereotypes and misperceptions of race and cultural identity. In his blow-up images of miniature toys he has recreated scenes of racism, genocide, and sexual fantasies. This series explores the blackface myth embodied in "black me... |
|
BleedThe war in Bosnia in the 1990s raised to common currency the terms "ethnic cleansing" and "humanitarian intervention." It brought back to Europe a barbarism not seen since the Second World War and was the first war fought very much under the eyes of the media. It was also the first conflict fought by killers who knew, even before the war had finished, that a war crimes tribunal awaited them. Winner of the 2002 European Publishers' Award for Photography, Simon Norfolk won the Olivier Rebbot Awar... |
|
Bless EthiopiaPhotographer Kazuyoshi Nomachi captures the unique mosaic of Ethiopia as it was meant to be experienced, from stories on faces of an ancient people to the daily chores of survival and tribal rituals.'... |

|
|
|