Look at Me
If you spent your entire life traveling—and posing for a photo on every trip—would you want your memories sold at a flea market? Or published on the web? TMN Art Director Frederic Bonn brings us a startling gallery of found pictures.
If you spent your entire life traveling—and posing for a photo on every trip—would you want your memories sold at a flea market? Or published on the web? TMN Art Director Frederic Bonn brings us a startling gallery of found pictures.
Traveling to see the world can provide fresh perspectives, especially if one's view is less than two inches from the ground. Artist Witold Riedel brings us a gallery of a very small friend abroad in the world.
Working for 19 years on the fringe of the Iron Curtain, photographer Brian Rose captured the landscapes of central Europe with Bruegel’s sensitivity for how a setting tells a story. A conversation about his work, and a gallery of photos from his odyssey.
From photographer Abelardo Morell, a gallery of hauntingly beautiful pictures excerpted from his new book, where we discover how much of the world can fit through a pinhole.
Can watercolors change how you perceive a killer? Do murderers have a harder time sitting for portraits?
More than 30,000 athletes celebrated the city this year by running the New York Marathon, covering five bridges, five boroughs, and 26.2 miles. A gallery of portraits from the finish line.
With an eye for the solitude that comes with open landscapes, German photographer Martin Wolf Wagner shares a gallery of luminescent, moving images where nighttime doesn’t necessarily mean darkness.
How much can you tell about a person from their yearbook photo, particularly when the yearbook is stocked with killers?
What if the city was something you could remake every day, restoring bits you feared were lost? Pitchaya Sudbanthad talks to the street artist known as Swoon, including a full gallery of her fascinating work.
Juicy private moments are often best kept private, unless they can be used for lasting art. Toronto photographer Robyn Cumming brings us a gallery of dramatic exposure, after the curtains are pulled back.