Klein, a native New Yorker, moved to Paris in the Second World War’s aftermath and forged an oeuvre spanning photography, film and painting
Plus, a striking photograph by Diane Arbus and the Guggenheim Bilbao at 25
From wartime princess in khaki green to widowed monarch in black, Elizabeth became, through visual media, the most recognised figure in the world
As he prepares for a major retrospective in Paris, he reflects on his homeland’s war with Russia and how his art was born from adversity
In her Armory Show solo stand with Higher Pictures Generation, Nona Faustine calls attention to the city’s oft-overlooked and pervasive ties to slavery
New version published by The Folio Society includes new insights from curator Mia Fineman who has selected key accompanying images
The exhibition in Chelsea explores the photographer’s prolific career documenting humanitarian emergencies
Sajjad Abbas, Raed Mutar and Layth Kareem say curators "prioritise the display of wrongly imprisoned Iraqis"
Cambodian government says stone artefacts kept at San Francisco home of billionaire Lindemann family match those looted from sacred site
The photo archives of Ebony and Jet magazines will be studied and digitised by Los Angeles’s Getty Research Institute and Washington, DC’s National Museum of African American History and Culture
Some say the images, alongside First Lady Olena Zelenska, are in poor taste as the battle with Russia continues while others argue it will promote Ukraine's cause
The artist’s powerful new body of work continues her exploration of queerness today
Volume comprises superb black-and-white images of 68 shipwrecks off the notoriously treacherous south-west coast, beginning in 1871
Christophe Cognet on his new documentary, From Where They Stood, which focuses on extermination camp prisoners’ photographic acts of resistance
France's historic photography festival gives top billing to the unseen, unrecognised and repressed, with a headline show dedicated to dissident feminist artists, many of whom worked behind the Iron Curtain
The new conference will use Sarajevo's museums as case studies for how post-conflict societies can invest in culture to keep the peace
Photographs by former British army officer Andy Barnham capture the lives of the translators whilst hiding their identity from Afghanistan's extremist rulers
Plus, US photographer of queer women, Alice Austen; and Michel Majerus at Art Basel
MK Gallery hosts the first British show of Vivian Maier, the American nanny who secretly took hundreds of thousands of photographs that first came to light in 2007
"My Dear Alice" explores, through hundreds of letters written to the unheralded artist, the romantic correspondences of Victorian-era women
From street scenes to social media, this sweeping survey examines how documentary photography has made sense of the UK’s cultural and political climate
The large-scale pictures, which recall both 19th century landscape painting and mid-20th century abstraction, comment on the very real effects humans have on the environment
After controversy on social media surrounding Newsha Tavakolian’s photographs of East Congo, Médecins Sans Frontières announces internal review
The US photographer has been awarded the £30,000 prize for her “sheer inventiveness and complexity of her approach to image making”
Strong messages are present in a number of booths at this year's edition of the UK's biggest photography fair
Our pick of the five photography exhibitions to see in the city this weekend
The fair, always a destination for discovering artists—be they young and emerging or older and overlooked—features several presentations foregrounding underappreciated photographers
Bold move by German photographer’s descendant to put archive on the blockchain sparks copyright row