Photographer Ed Grazda has been photographing in Afghanistan and Pakistan since the 1980s. Working with Fraglich Publishing, Grazda recently released his second book about Afghanistan, A Visual History: Afghanistan 1980-2004. My complete review is available on the Photo Eye website here.
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I am frequently asked to write reviews for MACK Books. Released in 2021, Jamie Hawkesworth's book The British Isles documents the everyday people and landscapes of his homeland. My review was published by Photo Eye, and is available here.
A few years ago, I traveled to Novi Sad, Serbia, to teach a workshop for students and faculty at the Academy of Arts. I have now been invited back to as a juror for their World Biennial Exhibition of Student Photography. Information on submitting to the exhibition is found here.
Photographer William Gedney spent a year photographing youth culture in San Francisco on a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1966-67. He culled together the resulting photographs into a book mock-up which was eventually published in 2021 by Duke University Press, A Time of Youth: San Francisco, 1966-1967. I published a review of the book with C4 Journal, available here.
Photo Eye asked me to review the newest publication by photographer Jörg Colberg, Vaterland, a book about the residual histories of World War II found in landscapes in Eastern Europe. The full review is available here.
I have another review up on Photo Eye. This one is about the new book by Kim Beil, Good Pictures: A History of Popular Photography. The complete review is available here. Kim Beil is an art historian at Stanford University. Good Pictures is a study of vernacular, popular photographic trends from the development of the medium to the present day.
My most recent review for Photo Eye, a book by photographer David Robbins called INDIA: Fragments from the Constellation, is now available here. David Robbins is a Seattle based photojournalist and travel photographer.
My most recent review for Photo Eye on the new Peter Mitchell book, Early Sunday Morning, is available here. Peter Mitchell is a British photographer known for his work in Leeds. Early Sunday Morning features previously unpublished photographs, made close to 30 years ago, and reveals an intimate portrait of the community through its vernacular architecture.
I've recently been collaborating with Catfish, an organization in the UK dedicated to advancing photographic publications about Southeast Asia. I recently completed this interview with Arum Tresnaningtyas Dayuputri, and photographer based in Bandung, West Java.
My most recent review with Photo Eye is now live, on the Datz Press publication of Nothing Will Ever Be the Same Again by Amanda Marchand. You can read the full review here. Nothing Will Ever Be the Same Again is a sentimental and poetic investigation on the passage of time.
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AuthorBrian Arnold is a photographer, educator, writer, and musician living in Ithaca, NY. For more information, please visit my other blog, A Photographer's Journal. Archives
September 2023
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