Supporting Photographers, Moving Walls
On Wednesday, the Open Society Foundations will mark their 20th group exhibition of “Moving Walls” — a project reflecting the group’s support for long-term documentary photography.
On Wednesday, the Open Society Foundations will mark their 20th group exhibition of “Moving Walls” — a project reflecting the group’s support for long-term documentary photography.
TIME assigned contract photographer Christopher Morris to direct ‘Conclave’, a short-film looking at the anticipation awaiting the Papal conclave in St. Peter’s Square.
Christopher Morris’ photos capture the emotions and sentiments of the crowd as they congregate and wait and watch and, in the end, marvel at the renewal of a 2,000-year old religious institution.
Photographer Adam Ferguson traveled to Burma for this week’s issue of TIME, documenting a nation fractured along ethnic and religious lines.
TIME contract photographer Christopher Morris sought to make an anthropological study of America—not for this week, or for this past election cycle—but a body of work that future generations could look back on to get a sense of the country’s mood.
TIME commissioned five photographers to document Hurricane Sandy in various locations across the Eastern seaboard.
In his latest book, ‘Red Thistle,’ photographer Davide Monteleone documents the rhythm of life in the Caucasus.
Mongolia is the most sparsely populated country on the planet, yet it is also, by some estimates, the world’s fastest growing economy. David Monteleone’s photographs depict the industry, landscapes and people of this country of contrasts.
By the end of 2014, Afghanistan’s armed forces will take over security from the international troops that have been stationed here for more than a decade. Adam Ferguson captures the Afghan National Army in training.
On the tenth anniversary of the start of the war in Afghanistan, TIME asks 40 renowned photographers to reflect on their harrowing experiences covering the conflict—and to describe which of their own photographs moved them most.