PJL: July 2013 (Part 2)
Curated by Mikko Takkunen, a collection of the best photojournalism around the web from the past two weeks.
Curated by Mikko Takkunen, a collection of the best photojournalism around the web from the past two weeks.
Fred Ritchin writes for LightBox on the photographic branding and rhetoric of the modern villain following the Boston bombings.
From the Trayvon Martin verdict and a deadly school meal poisoning in India to Mariano Rivera's final All Star game and Nelson Mandela's 95th birthday, TIME presents the best pictures of the week.
Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer Preston Gannaway began documenting the life of Tavaris "Teddy Ebony" Edwards when they met during Pride week at Norfolk State University last year.
The layered black and white photographs of Hong Kong Yesterday are the visual diary of a patient observer; a diary that, save for the lack of diesel-spewing motorbikes, cell phones and neon advertisements, truly feels like it might have been written — and photographed — yesterday.
LightBox presents Lucia Griggi's elusive, magical surf photography — images made while swimming in the strong currents, razor-sharp reefs and crashing waves of Hawaii and Fiji.
Photographer Sam Comen wanted to find a new way to explore the American historical narrative, so he turned to the small town of Lost Hills, Calif. to illustrate the duality of the immigrant-American experience.
From violent protests in Egypt and the start of the holy month of Ramadan to a driverless oil-tanker train explosion in Quebec and the running of the bulls in Spain, TIME presents the best pictures of the week.
Having covered the Arab Spring since 2011, Yuri Kozyrev returned to Egypt in the first days of July — on assignment for TIME — to capture the abrupt, almost neck-snapping changes that exploded in Cairo after the ousting of Islamist President Mohamed Morsi.
After a three-year process of cleaning and retouching, the well-worn prints of Edward Steichen's celebrated 1955 exhibition have been masterfully restored and are on permanent public view at Clervaux Castle in his native Luxembourg.
For her new book, Carolyn Drake spent five years and 15 trips roaming the expanse of Central Asia, documenting the hardy people of Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan who survived on the fringes of empires Russian and Chinese.