Overseas Press Club Award Winners Announced
The Overseas Press Club of America has just announced the winners of its annual awards. LightBox presents the work of the photojournalists who were honored by the OPC.
The Overseas Press Club of America has just announced the winners of its annual awards. LightBox presents the work of the photojournalists who were honored by the OPC.
Photojournalist Dominic Nahr recounts the difficulties of covering a war with quickly shifting front lines—and a complex map of rebellions and enmities.
One year after the deaths of photojournalists Tim Hetherington and Chris Hondros, Yuri Kozyrev visited Misrata, Libya. The city is rebuilding and remembering.
‘Photographs Not Taken,’ edited by Will Steacy, asks photographers around the world to reflect on a moment when they didn’t or couldn’t make a picture. On the eve of the one-year anniversary of his death, LightBox presents an essay by Tim Hetherington from the new book.
Mexican photojournalist Narciso Contreras documents the ongoing conflict in Burma’s Kachin State.
Steven Rubin hitched a ride in 1982 to rural Somerset County in northwestern Maine and embarked on a project that would continue for more than 30 years and is on display at drkrm in Los Angeles from April 28 through May 26.
Afghan photographer Massoud Hossaini has just won the Pulitzer Prize for breaking news photography.
Chechen authorities are the unseen presence in Diana Markosian’s photographs of girls growing up in the region.
Photojournalist Andrew Kaufman traveled across Florida to document the groundswell of protests in Miami and Sanford. “I had to make these pictures,” says Kaufman. “Seeing the anger and frustration in the news, I felt compelled to see and talk to the people who were taking their feelings to the streets.”
The ‘Almost Dawn in Libya’ project aims to show Libyans photographs taken during the civil war in their country and, in doing so, foster peace.