Çağdaş Erdoğan – Truth, Power and Control
The noblest goal of journalism is to speak truth to power and Turkish photographer Çağdaş Erdoğan’s first book Control does this to a depth not often achieved in media circles.
The noblest goal of journalism is to speak truth to power and Turkish photographer Çağdaş Erdoğan’s first book Control does this to a depth not often achieved in media circles.
The short-lived no wave scene of the late 1970s in New York was led by a small collective of avant-garde musicians, filmmakers and artists including Nan Goldin, Lydia Lunch, Arto Lindsay, James Chance and Irish artist Vivienne Dick.
In his latest book, Border Roads 1990-1994, photographer Tony O’Shea presents a haunting collection of images taken around the border between Northern and the Republic of Ireland during the early 1990s.
Born and raised in Dublin, photographer Joe Woolhead has been a resident of New York City for over 27 years. In 2004, he began working with Silverstein Properties, his main focus being on the rebuilding of the World Trade Center.
A new book by photographer, film maker, sound recordist and “sometime artist” Gregory Dunn documents the rapidly-changing face of his local neighbourhood Stoneybatter.
Shane Lynam’s first photobook documenting quirky and unusual 1960’s holiday resorts in the Languedoc region of the south of France gets Kickstarter funding.
For the first time, a collection of photographs taken by Irish photographer Tony O’Shea of the fans who lined those roads are published together in a new photobook ‘Italia 90 Dublin’ (Café Royal Books).
In the fast-moving and mercurial world of social media, the photography app is the art world’s weapon of choice. Instagram, the mobile photo-sharing application that allows users to share pictures and videos, is clearly the leader of the pack.