British Journal of Photography
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British Journal of Photography — the world's oldest and most influential photography title. It is home to some of the photography industry's most prestigious awards. The in-house agency connects the best photographic talent with major international brands to produce game-changing visual campaigns.
British Journal of Photography
8h ago
© Ana Norman Bermúdez
Ana Norman Bermúdez incorporates Hmong embroidery into her portraits of the women, a collaboration championed by asylum NGOs
Eight years ago, a woman belonging to Vietnam’s Hmong population fled the country for Thailand after her family was attacked. She now resides in Bangkok, but still faces challenges in her adopted home. “It has been very difficult for me because I struggle to find enough work to support my six children,” the woman says. “Even when I find a job, the pay is very low because I do not have Thai nationality.”
Her testimony accompanies her portrait in Sil ..read more
British Journal of Photography
2d ago
Eddie Otchere, MC GQ, Elvis Meade, Stoke Newington, Hackney, 1995, Courtesy the artist
A new travelling exhibition explores what it means to be a working-class photographer documenting the working-class experience in post-Thatcher Britain
In summer 1989, political scientist Francis Fukuyama wrote: “What we are witnessing is not just the end of the Cold War, or a passing of a particular period of postwar history, but the end of history as such: that is, the end point of mankind’s ideological evolution and the universalisation of western liberal democracy as the final form of human government ..read more
British Journal of Photography
4d ago
All images © Phoebe Somerfield
From Sheffield to Peckham via Japan, the artist is tireless in his search for life in all its complexity. His next journey is to the heart of ‘future nostalgia’. We catch up with him at his London studio
When Johny Pitts left school, he worked at Debenhams in Sheffield’s Meadowhall shopping centre, stacking and occasionally selling crockery. It was not long before he was sacked for breaking too many plates. Embarrassed to tell his mother, he pretended he still had the job, leaving the house on shift days and wandering aimlessly through the city. He would venture ..read more
British Journal of Photography
6d ago
All images by Richard Billingham, from Ray’s a Laugh, 2024. Courtesy the artist and Mack
A new version of Richard Billingham’s pioneering family project raises the same old questions around access, class and sensation
For those who are new to the story of Richard Billingham’s rise to fame through the first printing of Ray’s a Laugh, it is worthwhile revisiting the context of publication and the frenzy around the emergence of this work in 1996/7 – beyond just the story of a ‘proletariat-sevant’s’ remarkable rise from poverty and his shelf-stacking job at Kwik Save.
Though often pitched a ..read more
British Journal of Photography
1w ago
All images © Dia Mrad
Dia Mrad’s people-free photographs capture the resourcefulness of the Beirut population
How do you photograph a crisis that is engulfing every section of society? That was the question facing Dia Mrad when he returned to Lebanon in 2019, having spent two years in Europe following his master’s degree in architecture at The Holy Spirit University of Kaslik, Jounieh. Back in Beirut, he shared the anxieties and mounting anger of his fellow citizens. The 17 October Revolution had led to prime minister Saad Hariri’s resignation, with widespread protests against sectarian rule ..read more
British Journal of Photography
1w ago
All images © Harley Bainbridge
With over 100,000 people awaiting an autism diagnosis in the UK, Harley Bainbridge spent time with one family navigating the highs and lows of the system
“I was aware that autism is a spectrum, but I wasn’t aware of how broad a spectrum it is,” says Harley Bainbridge – “not until I got to meet the families and to know individual kids and their characteristics. That’s really when I discovered that most representations of autistic people are really narrow. They tend to show people as almost neurotic, or else autism is described as a superpower.”
Often characterise ..read more
British Journal of Photography
2w ago
Chapungu – The Day Rhodes Fell, 2015 © Sethembile Msezane
Featuring artists from across the world, this south London show surveys lens-based activism beyond straight documentary
The last decade has seen key changes for women and women’s rights, particularly around bodily autonomy. In 2020 the Polish Constitutional Tribunal brought in new laws preventing abortion in the case of foetal abnormalities, effectively banning terminations in all cases except incest, rape and danger to the mother’s health. Turkey withdrew from the Istanbul Convention, a landmark framework for combating gender-based vi ..read more
British Journal of Photography
2w ago
All images © Lucija Rosc
Lucija Rosc’s new project aims to capture her elder mentor’s creativity through collage, jokes and a vinyl record
“The most important thing my grandma taught me is it’s best to do what you love and ignore the negative thoughts, because life is hard enough anyway,” says Lucija Rosc. “She is a very optimistic person, very funny and lovely.”
Born in Slovenia in 1995, Rosc has spent a lot of time with her grandparents, hanging out with them rather than going to kindergarten, and continuing the relationship once she was at school. Her grandmother, Mica, spent years working ..read more
British Journal of Photography
3w ago
All images © Tarrah Krajnak. Self-portraits from the series Master Rituals II: Weston’s Nudes
Informed by her own history and the established canon of photography, Krajnak’s work is a complex exploration of presence and place
To rephotograph, to reimagine, to reclaim. Such words imply a necessary revisiting, an action that must happen again and again, and, as such, serve to animate the work of Tarrah Krajnak, whose significant oeuvre has only recently begun to be acknowledged by major prizes and institutions after a two-decade-long photographic and teaching practice. The hallmark of her often ..read more
British Journal of Photography
3w ago
Sudan, Lives Torn Apart by War, 2023 (Original Image 1986). All images © Jenny Matthews and courtesy Street Level Photoworks
Jenny Matthews’ work is proof that a camera is a weapon in the hands of women, empowering them to dismantle societal norms and document untold stories
Sewing Conflict: Photography, War and Embroidery is a powerful solo exhibition by documentary photographer and filmmaker Jenny Matthews. Her latest work demonstrates an important strand of contemporary British art practice in combining photography and embroidery – an engaging blend of visual storytelling and traditional c ..read more