I was struck by these portraits by photographers for Reuters, AP and AFP/Getty. Along with their existing captions is a second one I've volunteered to think about how these photos are actually consumed.
Continue ReadingAfter all the highly-publicized incidents of police brutality and racial profiling in New York and around the country, what's as much under the microscope here are these militarized police departments.
Continue ReadingThe photo captures the bare life of the human subject in migration; the emblematic equipment of global transportation and a powerful but harsh global economy that permeates everyday life.
Continue ReadingThis show of muscle is reminiscent of the American invasion of Iraq -- as supplemented by the Blackwater group.
Continue ReadingIs this scene what you would have envisioned?
Continue ReadingBeyond the jesting and the field day with hats, these two Parr photos from the Kentucky Derby feel a bit more political than usual.
Continue ReadingAs climate change gains more visibility in the public square, it's interesting to observe how creatures are playing a supporting role.
Continue ReadingIt’s not just cozying up to the man.
Continue ReadingThe photos capture a Baltimore that, unlike the stereotypical stories of anger and violence, poverty or neglect, is not one thing.
Continue ReadingIf you’re a politico and you want to make a point about education, you need to sit or stand in front of a wall of books. That’s the first rule. The second rule is to make it about the students. And like all the smart kids in school, President...
Continue ReadingIs it significant, then, in a city that is 63% black, that the photos of fans just beyond the gates aren't all that racially balanced?
Continue ReadingPeople from the United States have been looking at South American volcanoes and seeing them as metaphors for what’s happening at home for at least one hundred and fifty years.
Continue ReadingWhat was particular to the photo coverage of protest violence this week was the portraiture. I don't recall citizens so willing to share their venom with news photographers in an actual pose.
Continue ReadingMaybe the reporter knows something we don't because his reaction to this potentially explosive situation is primarily one of bemusement.
Continue ReadingRituals of public memory have always been about forming the community through public display—using cultural materials to fashion and shape how "we" want to remember ourselves.
Continue ReadingWe don’t love the photos of the Calbuco Volcano because the eruption reminds us of a Yellowstone geyser, a giant 4-H winning cauliflower or the perfect backdrop for the monotonous subdivision.
Continue ReadingHow can you call an image subtle when it’s 150 feet long, takes up an entire square in NYC and graces the cover of the NYT Magazine?
Continue ReadingOf all the nature and eco images I’ve seen lately, this hit me like a bucket of ice water.
Continue ReadingIsn't it curious how people tend to think about "ecology" as it relates to plants and air and water and less in terms of humanity and how much we look out for each other.
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