In pictures: daily visual inspiration from the W* photography desk

In pictures: daily visual inspiration from the W* photography desk

The exhibition ‘Magnum Manifesto’ celebrates the 70th anniversary of the reknown photojournalist agency that has supported innovative and interesting photography projects since it’s conception in Paris in 1947. Curated by Clément Chéroux, the exhibition features images from 75 of its members across the past 7 decades, including founders Robert Capa, Henri Cartier-Bresson, and David Seymour, and contemporary masters Alec Soth, Jonas Bendiksen, Susan Meiselas, and Martin Parr. Magnum photographers have always been at the forefront of ground-breaking imagery and this exhibition will provide a visual history of the ways in which the members have contributed to our cultural narrative. On view at Museo dell’Ara Paric in Rome until 3 June.

Pictured: Cherries spilled on crosswalk, New York City, by Christopher Anderson, 2014. © the artist, Magnum Photos

Writer: Lynsie Roberts

Celebrating 70 years of Magnum in Rome
8 February

Paris’ Jeu de Paume is hosting a retrospective of American Magnum photojournalist Susan Meiselas, showcasing her documentary practice since the 1970s. Over the course of her career, she documented a broad range of social issues and international projects, from domestic violence in San Francisco to revolutionaries in Latin America and refugees in Kurdistan. One series began in 1971 in Nicaragua (pictured), where she photographed the civil uprising and its aftermath over several decades, returning multiple times to document the original subjects and sites. These long-term projects illuminated how context and distribution influences the interpretation of her work, and calls into question the role of the photographer as witness to social issues in other countries. Until 20 May.

Pictured: Muchachos await counterattack by the Guard, Matagalpa, Nicaragua, by Susasn Meiselas, 1978. © the artist / Magnum Photos

Writer: Lynsie Roberts

Susan Meiselas’ oeuvre applauded in Paris
7 February

Gian Paul Lozza’s fascination for nocturnal happenings comes to the fore in his exhibition ‘Somnium’, on view at Francesca Maffeo Gallery. The Swiss photographer references landscape paintings of the 19th century with quiet evening scenes, punctuated by manmade objects and tiny traces of activity. Lozza refers to his photographs as ‘metascapes’, referencing the audience’s ability to draw associations and derive their own interpretations to the images. A large format camera captures scenes illuminated by low light, thus producing a heightened sense of melancholy within the series.

Pictured, Container, 2017, by Gian Paul Lozza. © The artist

Writer: Lynsie Roberts

Gian Paul Lozza’s nightscapes
3 February