Good Pictures, Bad Timing
When a legendary curator chided Will Brown to find his way as a photographer, he set aside images he had made of his Philadelphia neighborhood. Today, those photos attest to the changes in the area.Read more »
When a legendary curator chided Will Brown to find his way as a photographer, he set aside images he had made of his Philadelphia neighborhood. Today, those photos attest to the changes in the area.Read more »
When a legendary curator chided Will Brown to find his way as a photographer, he set aside images he had made of his Philadelphia neighborhood. Today, those photos attest to the changes in the area.Read more »
When a legendary curator chided Will Brown to find his way as a photographer, he set aside images he had made of his Philadelphia neighborhood. Today, those photos attest to the changes in the area.Read more »
A generation of female photographers is looking to one another for advice and support as they raise children while still going on assignment overseas. Read more »
Every day is “Throwback Thursday” for Daniel Akselrad and Erik Goyenechea, who have perfected the lo-fi ’90s look of Game Boy photos.Read more »
Most pictures don’t make an edit’s final cut. But when Magnum photographers went back through their files, they found delightful images that had gone unseen. Until now. Read more »
After covering the fall of the Taliban, Zohreh Soleimani returned to Afghanistan to examine the lives of women in prison. Read more »
A little-known network of buses and vans takes people from New York City to visit relatives in prisons scattered in small towns across the state.Read more »
Three years after Clay Benskin told a photographer friend he could take better pictures with a smartphone, he has produced thousands of images. But he still doesn’t see himself as a street photographer.Read more »
Revisiting the Atlantic City streets that were immortalized in Monopoly. Read more »
Alex Masi vowed to help an Indian child he photographed in Bhopal continue her schooling while he pressed on with a long term project about her.Read more »
Daniel Berehulak’s “Braving Ebola” is a result of inspiration, improvisation and a determination to offer viewers a new way to see, and feel, an urgent story.Read more »
“Off Color,” a New York Times video series, looks at how artists of color are making sharp social commentary about race in America through comedy and performance. 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.