2022
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Richard Mosse: Broken Spectre
Irish artist Richard Mosse’s most ambitious work to date, Broken Spectre, is a powerful response to the devastating and ongoing impact of deforestation in the Amazon Rainforest. It employs a dazzling array of photographic techniques.
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Ursula Schulz-Dornburg: Huts, Temples, Castles
Unpublished images by Ursula Schulz-Dornburg capturing the improvised structures of a radical playground built by children in 1960s Amsterdam.
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Wolfgang Bellwinkel: Vast Land
Between the year 849 and the present, Myanmar has had an astounding 22 capitals, while the seat of government has changed 39 times. Vast Land by Wolfgang Bellwinkel is a photographic study of the country‘s last three capitals: Mandalay (1857–1885), Yangon (1885–2005) and Naypyitaw (since 2005).
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Alys Tomlinson: Gli Isolani (The Islanders)
Over a period of two years, Tomlinson documented the traditional costumes and masks worn during festivals and celebrations on the islands of the Venetian lagoon, Sicily and Sardinia.
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Margit Erb; Michael Parillo (Eds.): Unseen Saul Leiter
The first sightings of newly discovered work from Saul Leiter’s abundant archive of colour slides.
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Oluremi C. Onabanjo: Marilyn Nance: Last Day in Lagos
Last Day in Lagos is a focused study on a singular African American photographer, through an archival encounter with her documentation of the landmark FESTAC’77 festival.
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Michael Lesy: Walker Evans: Last Photographs & Life Stories
In this unconventional, lyrical biography, Lesy traces Evans’s intimate, idiosyncratic relationships with men and women—the circle of friends who made Walker Evans who he was.
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Olaf Unverzart: Walking Distance
Five continents, three decades: with Walking Distance, Olaf Unverzart presents his interpretation of a travel diary.
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Crystal Bennes: Klara and the Bomb
Klara and the Bomb is a photographical and historical work that charts connecting threads between the invention of modern computers, the history of nuclear weapons and, in particular, the narratives of the women involved.
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Luo Yang: Carpe Diem
Carpe Diem gathers together two of Luo’s seminal series – Girls and Youth – alongside miscellaneous photographs shot throughout the 1980s, 1990s and 2000s.
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Lewis Bush: Depravity’s Rainbow
Depravity’s Rainbow dealts with the contradictory history of space exploration, and the way that militaristic aims have often been dressed in a cloak of peaceful civilian science.
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Juan Vicente Aliaga (Author): Ilse Bing
German photographer Ilse Bing (1899-1998) has secured her place as one of the major photographers of the 20th century. Her pioneering images during the inter-war era reveal a modern vision influenced by the impact of both the Bauhaus and Surrealism.