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Dodho Magazine


Small monsters by Mofeed Abu Shalwa
A group of rare beetles around the world, which I photographed with focus stacking technology .. This project contains thousands of images integrated into the program Zerene Stacker. 

Post-truth and Post-production: How Much Editing Is Too Much?
In the past a photographer needed chemicals, an enlarger and patience to alter a negative; today a single slider in Lightroom or a duplicated layer in Photoshop can transform reality in seconds. That immediacy raises a question that concerns not only purists but anyone who shares images: at what point does legitimate correction turn into misleading distortion?


Brexit : 208 ways to leave the EU by Michel Petillo
Three and a half years down the line, the Brexit project, fuelled essentially by UK right- wing party politics using migration as a divide and conquer strategy, remains stranded in the harbour. This historical political U-turn has shaken the very core of British democracy and its institutions. It has left businesses, UK and other EU citizens living abroad with an uncertain vision of the future.

Emptiness by Kaushik Dolui
Emptiness In summer months, Leh’s clear blue skies, stark landscapes and the deep valleys appear magical. The streets of Leh that used to be filled with visitors in summer now go nearly empty in the mid November.



Christmas trees by Seigar
This series explores life, life as a circle. Though we are seeing these Christmas trees in their final moments, they as well as people have a beginning, middle and an end.

Arnold Newman: Redefining portraits
Arnold Newman was a man who didn't like labels. He invented a proper and modern style of photography that, in addition to breaking with the different schemes and classic traditions that defined the portraits

Of Lions and Lambs : Benita Suchodrev
The tourist season is over, the promenade is empty and Brexit is at the door when Benita Suchodrev returns to the British coastal town of Blackpool to photograph the hidden reality behind the famous Amusement Mile.

Cluedo by Gary Sheridan
This series references the board game Cluedo, a who done it crime game where the objective is to find the murderer and the weapon that was used in the most heinous of all crimes. 

Mannequins by Hans-Martin Dölz
The mannequin, in its modern form, started to appear on the high streets of London, Paris and New York in the 1870s and quickly became an essential part of any window display.



Andre Kertesz: Humanism and visual lyricism
Andre Kertesz was a silent but important influence on photojournalism and the art of photography. For more than seventy years, his subtle and penetrating vision helped define a medium that was in his childhood.

Ouranos by Jean-Marc Delivert
Ouranos is a serie of black and white photographs, where the sky takes a central part to stress on the ambiance created by the clouds. Above the sea or a city, clouds have the power to change the light and how we see the horizon.



Macro

Dec 14, 2019
Macro is a personal experimental short that explores the tiny moments which comprise our natural world. This meditative, loose-narrative weaves a thread through a lush micro-world



Magazine Worthy Shot
Dodho Magazine partnered with GuruShots "The Worlds Greatest Photo Game" in a photo challenge contest to its titled "Magazine Worthy Shot"  Over 100,000 photos were submitted and more than 45 million votes were cast!

Visual poetry : White Moon by Tatiana Saavedra
Tatiana Saavedra is a a moon enthusiast and photographer based in Portugal who tries to create visual poetry because there is something very special in colors and dreams. From a young age she has been interested in photography and cinematography later on.

Patagonia by Nias Zavatta
Patagonia. Suspended atmosphere is silence, is no time around us. More you go down throw South America and more you start a deep dialogue with loneliness and frailty. Nature becomes the main part of this relation: it just enters, sometimes with violence sometimes with gentleness. 

Tina Modotti: When art morphs into politics
Pioneer of photojournalism; Tina Modotti was a very multifaceted woman, as photography was not the only thing that characterized her life. Model, actress, nurse and possibly Comintern agent. She sacrificed much of her artistic sense to give a place to her political beliefs.

Mahogany Summer by Ari Jaaksi
I own a small mahogany boat from the early -60s. I’ve kept the boat as simple as possible without electrical aids or modern conveniences.

Dimensions : Amorfo by Žilvinas Kropas & Guillermo Alvarez
The essential feature of photography is to capture and reflect a reality in which the dimensions of space, time, authentic being, of mind and feelings are equally prominent, linking in an easily discernible way all those in the area: photographer, viewer, environment, its it’s details and other members involved in it.



She Said / He Said #2 by Florin Firimita
The world of photography is foreign to me. I’ve been in front of your lens many times, but I never pay attention to the technicalities. I’d rather have a conversation with you anyway. And I think that is the reason why our work speaks.

Helmut Newton: Portraits of voyeurism and sensuality
Helmut Newton, always a worshiper and lover of beauty, knew how to capture it better than anyone with his camera. His works crossed boundaries over and over again, demonstrating the diverse facets of women who were seeking their new identity during the sexual revolution of the moment.

People, what else? by Ignacio Santana Padrón
From my beginnings in photography, I always felt especially attracted to capture images of people. However, I didn't want to make simple portraits with people posing or stolen photographs without practically no contact between them and me.


Diane Arbus : Tribute to the suffering of the marginalized
Diane Arbus forced her audience to face the horrors by making them see the incommodious. The so-called "portrait photographer of the freaks" redefined the boundaries of what can be photographed and challenged the concepts of beauty and abnormality.

Heartbeat : Aritmia by Fabrizio Quagliuso
There is such a thing as an irregular rhythm syndrome, where the heartbeat is inconsistent; it races, slows down or flutters. There are times when the heart skips a beat, others when it frantically chases the following one to the point of breathlessness, swarming, oscillating.

Women’s sport by Sergio Ferreira
In the current model of society, the word sport is synonymous with health, culture and modernity, but also it means wealth. At least, that is the way the State considers it, as one of the great economic engines.


Winter forest by Ari Jaaksi
I packed my tried and true Hasselblad camera kits into my backpack, put on my warmest winter clothes, and headed to Kintulammi, a nature reserve in the middle of Finland.


Molokans by Marina Balakina
Molokans are Russian Christians who do not recognise any intermediary communication with God. Molokan history began in 18th Century with the rejection of icons, churches, hierarchies, within the Church and the numerous sacraments.

Blur as Discourse: From Sugimoto to Uta Barth
Photographic history planted the notion that sharpness equals truth, that every line must be scalpel precise, and that any lack of focus betrays incompetence. Since the 1970s, however, several artists have turned that supposed flaw into a critical and poetic device.

Xinjiang: Identities on Borrowed Time by Maxime Crozet
On the North-Western borders of China lies the immense region of Xinjiang (literally, “New Frontier”). Until a few years ago, the region had a majority of Uyghurs, a Sunni Muslim people speaking a Turkic language, and also included Kazakh

Berenice Abbott: Immortalizing modernization
Berenice Abbott immortalized the passage of time as nobody had. Full of rebellion against a period that was small-fitted for her free spirit, she took photos of a past on which the world was being built



Weegee: stills of a crime’s aftermath
Weegee was born as Usher Fellig on June 12, 1899 in Zolovich, Austrian Poland (now Ukraine). In 1909, his family emigrated to the United States and his first name was changed to its American equivalent, ‘Arthur’.


Public mourning by Alireza Memariani
The most common cause of death was the plastic we found in their stomachs. We then separated the bones from other organs,From the thirty dead bodies, we reached a flock of ten deer ,Golden herd.