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Helmut Newton ; White Women / Sleepless Nights / Big Nudes
Napoli (25 Feb – 18 Jun 2017) The exhibition presents over 200 images by Helmut Newton, one of the most important and famous photographers of the twentieth century. It collects together images from "White Women", "Sleepless Nights", and "Big Nudes"

Hugh Edwards at the Art Institute of Chicago
Chicago (May 24–Oct 29, 2017) In 1959—after 30 years at the Art Institute—Hugh Edwards became the museum’s curator of photography, a position he held until his retirement in 1970.

Havana by David Saxe
Havana is a city suspended in time, where life slowly drifts to a steady salsa beat. People are civil and friendly—they will argue baseball in the park, walk along the Malecon, make love, marry, and raise families

People of the Earth: San tribe by Aga Szydlik
People of the Earth / Deeply rooted in their nomadic culture and in symbiotic relationship with the animals and plants, San are the original inhabitants of South Africa, aboriginal to sub-Saharan Africa.

Mostki by Platon Terentev
For about 3 months I tried to take pictures of the landscape in the village. Landscape with a pathway (in russian - mostki). Catch the necessary light that would show them from the side with which they are unknown.

Svetlana by Efrat Sela
Svetlana, 46-year-old Christian woman, a survivor, always on the move, she had fallen hard into drugs and prostitution along her path. I've met Svetlana for the first time on November 2015 at the "Death Courtyard" in a forgotten dark alley in Tel Aviv.

Collection Edward Steichen
The CNA in Luxembourg opens a major space for photography Edward Steichen´s The bitter Years meets contemporary photography.


Uman pilgrimage by Tomer Ifrah
Every year, tens of thousands of jewish pilgrims travel from around the world and mainly from Israel to Uman, Ukraine to celebrate the Jewish New Year, during the holiday of "Rosh Hashana".

Conversations by Philip and Caroline Pegden
It is often assumed that people in large cities are incommunicado and more so now, in a world dominated by social media, played out on the handsets of smart phones. However, this series of photographs highlights that social communication is irrepressible.

About Behind The Scars by Sophie Mayanne
"Scars" is a celebration of beauty, of flaws, of battles won and obstacles overcome. It is about survival, living beyond that and capturing the memories. It is a truly honest depiction of how our history, shown through these scars does not define us but compels us.

Forgotten by Herman Čater
In the mountains in the middle of nowhere, a full hour’s walk from the nearest village, I met a man, 80 years old, living alone. His name was Stanko. He was kind and invited me into the house. The house was more than 200 years old.

In Parentheses by Philip LePage
They say home is where the heart is. It is a place I have never been able to forget, nor find my way back to. I have always thought of it as a series of islands. It is such an immense, densely populated city.

kings,queens & fairy tales by John Paul Evans
The project is a development of work with my partner Peter in which we perform various incarnations of the couple/family/ wedding portrait. These images were initially inspired by the tradition of the painted wedding portrait in western art history.

Terri Gold: Still Points in a Turning World
New York (April 19 – May 11, 2017) Salomon Arts Gallery will feature work by award-winning international photographer Terri Gold, who is known for her poetic infrared imagery of the remote corners of the globe and the indigenous cultures that inhabit them.

As director, Josh's documentary work has screened at Toronto International, SXSW, True/False, DOC NYC, Hot Docs and Maryland, and been featured by Vimeo Staff Picks and Dazed & Confused Magazine.



Dissociated by France Dubois
Thoses pictures are driven by the need to feel alive, witnessing the development of someone’s physical & mental condition.What doesn’t kill you make you stronger. That said, some deeper wounds may break some parts of your being forever.

Ted Vancleave Co-founder of ImageRights
ImageRights International is spearheading the global fight against the infringement of copyrighted visual works by visual artists including photographers, graphic artists and painters. ImageRights identifies, assesses and pursues copyright infringement claims on behalf of its professional artists, agencies and publishers.

Emil Otto Hoppé ; Unveiling a Secret
Köln (6 Apr – 30 Jul 2017) An exhibition in collaboration with the Fondazione MAST, Bologna, and the E. O. Hoppé Estate Collection/Curatorial Assistance, California, curated by Urs Stahel.


Haiti – The Ongoing Struggle by Giles Clarke
The last 230 years of Haiti's history, from the days of Napoleonic slavery and the ensuing 'black revolution', is a struggle etched deep into the soul of the Haitian people. In 1804, after years of colonial fighting and over 120,000 slave deaths

Yo no di a Luz by Nadia Shira Cohen
El Salvador's Abortion Ban in the age of Zika. The argument over when the human life begins is one of the most contentious in our world today. There are 66 countries that prohibit abortion under nearly all circumstances—though almost all of them exclude cases where the mother’s life is in danger.

Light and landscape by Trevor Cole
These black and white images are from a diversity of global locations. Ireland, Canada, Iceland, The Faroe Islands and Namibia. They endeavour to convey a sense of space, atmosphere and the way in which light exacerbates tonal contrasts.

MOB by Areg Balayan
For the past 11 years I have lived in Stepanakert, the capital of the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, with my wife and two children. On April 2nd, 2016, the military conflict that brought the republic to life started again.


Living in Solitude by Manel-Quiros
Her name was Reena. It did not matter that she was only twelve, nor did it matter that all she wanted was to survive the streets of Chittagong in Bangladesh, after being thrown out by her stepfather.

Detachment by Nicolas Dhervillers
In Detachment, the new photographic series by Nicolas Dhervillers, nature is frozen, cloaked in frosty white. Roads lead to the unknown or disappear round sharp bends. Forests resemble jungles.

Africa – Flashes of light by Ana María Robles
This series of photos, not represent all of Africa, some people there are, they are the result of having shared some time with them. They opened their houses for me and offered me their food, so I am very grateful.

Urban-Tapestry Photomontages by Wing Chan
Hong Kong (April 11 to May 11, 2017) Entering the world of Wing Chan’s photomontages is the beginning of a visual adventure. His unique and stimulating images encourage you to take a closer look at the environment of the city.

Altagracia by Santiago Vidal
The Altagracia Day is a national holiday in the island of La Hispaniola, which is shared by the Dominican Republic and Haiti. This day is celebrated by around 20 million of the island’s inhabitants.


Figures and Incidents by Elvira Kolerova
Elvira Kolerova is a Russian-born photographer who currently lives and works in Berlin, Germany. She holds a master's degree in American Studies from the Humboldt University of Berlin and is studying fine art photography at the moment.

Sebastião Salgado ; Kuwait: A Desert of Fire
Brussels (25 May – 16 Sep 2017) La Photographie Gallerie presents a stunning series of images by acclaimed photographer Sebastião Salgado depicting the burning Kuwaiti oil fields of the 1991 Gulf War.



African Dream by Yvon Buchmann
I had dreamed of it all my life. I had seen so many reports on Africa during my childhood in the cinema of my village that I was convinced to go home on this first trip to Senegal.

100% m² by Kata Sedlak
Fascinated by the inner power of personal relationships within the family, Kata Sedlak documentary captures various moments of her children Stella, Oliver and Alan, getting familiarized with the world, oneself and close relatives.

Tokyo Series by Chris Becker
Chris Becker has lived in some major cities including New York, Minneapolis and Taipei, so when the opportunity arose, he was excited to visit the metropolis of Tokyo.

Irving Penn ; Centennial
New York (April 24 - July 30, 2017.) The most comprehensive retrospective to date of the work of the great American photographer Irving Penn (1917–2009), this exhibition will mark the centennial of the artist's birth.

Lov’yer by Marta Kochanek
The world witnesses love between people of all nationalities and races. This planet gives room to those attracted to people of the same, opposite and both genders. It is how this world is constructed. It is how it always was.

A chance to shine by Javier Fergo
I have been taking pictures of Flamenco for over ten years, in different festivals and venues. After so long you get to recognize what is known as “duende” in flamenco.


Dark Zoo by Nicolas Evariste
Dark Zoo is the product of several expeditions to various French wildlife parks. Through this series of animal portraits, I’m trying to convey emotions while attempting to disregard the prefabri- cated environment of the zoo

7439 Miles to (re)discover America!
Paris (May 13 - September 9, 2017) No American road trip looms larger in our collective consciousness than the one bound west, and has been both the favorite subject and a formidable challenge for most artists, from Robert Frank to Jack Kerouac.

Moon by Andrea Torres Balaguer
Torres Balaguer creates pictures that suggest stories and invites the spectator to interpret them. She is searching and experimenting with the boundaries between reality and fiction.