A Limited View of Boys From the Bronx
Examining Stephen Shames’s new book “Bronx Boys,” Maurice Berger raises questions about the responsibilities inherent in documenting a community.Read more »
Examining Stephen Shames’s new book “Bronx Boys,” Maurice Berger raises questions about the responsibilities inherent in documenting a community.Read more »
Examining Stephen Shames’s new book “Bronx Boys,” Maurice Berger raises questions about the responsibilities inherent in documenting a community.Read more »
Examining Stephen Shames’s new book “Bronx Boys,” Maurice Berger raises questions about the responsibilities inherent in documenting a community.Read more »
In “Hidden Scars,” Stanley Greene returns to Chechnya to document the aftermath of the 1993 conflict.Read more »
Itinerant groups of soccer superfans in Russia prove their loyalty by slugging it out with rival fans – sometimes of the same team.Read more »
Gabor Szilasi never intended to create an archive of life in Quebec, yet his images constitute a vibrant visual history of the province that was his haven when he fled Communist Hungary.Read more »
Sage Sohier’s photos of same-sex couples were inspired, in part, by her father — who never admitted he was gay despite having lived with boyfriends.Read more »
This year’s grant in humanistic photography goes to Joseph Sywenkyj, who has spent years documenting one family’s struggle in Ukraine. It is not, he said, a story of quick change or fast healing. Read more »
In “Office Romance,” The New York Times Magazine’s director of photography shares her love affair — if not obsession — with Instagram photos that feature dramatic light, shapes and shadows inside the Times building. Read more »
For more than 60 years, Marc Riboud has collected the humor, grace, anguish and beauty of fleeting moments around the world. Read more »
LaToya Ruby Frazier looked at her family’s history to build an enduring narrative of African-American life in the Rust Belt town where she was raised. Read more »
Which side are you on? When it comes to kids and their stuff, JeongMee Yoon discovered it came down to this: pink or blue?Read more »
Debi Cornwall wanted to see how prisoners and military guards lived at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. She discovered a surreal “paradise” marked by contrast and contradictions.Read more »
Lens is the photojournalism blog of The New York Times, presenting the finest and most interesting visual and multimedia reporting -- photographs, videos and slide shows. A showcase for Times photographers, it also seeks to highlight the best work of other newspapers, magazines and news and picture agencies; in print, in books, in galleries, in museums and on the Web. And it will draw on The Times's own pictorial archive, numbering in the millions of images and going back to the early 20th century. E-mail us tips, story suggestions and ideas to lensnytimes@gmail.com.