Joyce Campbell
An artist working in photography, video and sculpture, Joyce Campbell has exhibited around the world, works between Los Angeles and Wairoa, teaches at Elam School of Fine Arts, and in 2016 was shortlisted for the Walters Prize.
An artist working in photography, video and sculpture, Joyce Campbell has exhibited around the world, works between Los Angeles and Wairoa, teaches at Elam School of Fine Arts, and in 2016 was shortlisted for the Walters Prize.
American photographer Donna Ferrato has championed women’s rights through her work on domestic violence for nearly 30 years. In November 2016, Ferrato’s most well-known image, which launched her journey down this path, was included in Time magazine’s 100 Most Influential series of photographs.
After beginning her career in photography education, teaching 'visual literacy' in public primary schools, Susan Meiselas turned to photojournalism. She is best known for her long-term coverage of Nicaragua. Her work appears in many books, and in the permanent collection of the Whitney Museum of Art.
Former president of Magnum Photos, British photographer Stuart Franklin of ‘Tank Man’ fame originally wanted to be an artist, but a desire to be able to pay the bills led him to photography, and a career that has spanned more than 40 years.
After studies in psychology and geology, New York-born Ballen made South Africa home—and began to explore its small towns with his camera in hand. His work has evolved through photojournalism to 'documentary fiction' to moving image: the infamous Die Antwood music video he co-produced in 2012 is pushing 80 million views.
The director of photography at National Geographic began her career at the magazine as a university intern in 1979. Sarah Leen then freelanced for more than 25 years, shooting stories in Uganda, Siberia, Mexico and the United States. She joined the magazine staff as a senior photo editor in 2004, before moving into her current role in 2013.
The only person to have won four Pulitzer Prizes for journalism, Carol Guzy has photographed many major news events over the last 30 years: the fall of Communism, the Somalian civil war, famine in Ethiopia, Kosovo refugees, the ever-widening ripples of Hurricane Katrina, and, most recently, the aftermath of the 2010 earthquake in Haiti.
Twelve times nominated for an Academy Award, British cinematographer Roger Deakins was the man behind the lens on films such as The Shawshank Redemption, Skyfall, No Country for Old Men, and O Brother Where Art Thou. He’s also the longtime collaborator of the Coen brothers.
Most of Brian Skerry’s career has taken place underwater. He’s spent more than 10,000 hours in the depths in pursuit of stories for National Geographic—where his work has appeared regularly since 1998—and he continues to travel the world on assignments.
With more than 25 years in the business, Pool Collective co-founder and Top 200 advertising photographer Sean Izzard produces critically acclaimed personal work alongside commercial assignments for some of the world’s largest corporates.
In the late 80s, with the support of Vogue's brand-new editor, Anna Wintour, Peter Lindbergh single-handedly changed the direction of fashion photography. His images ushered in a simpler look and launched the phenomenon of the 90s supermodel. Since then, his books have sold hundreds of thousands of copies, and he remains in demand for his fashion editorial work and portraits.
Over a career spanning five decades, Melbourne-based Robert Imhoff has photographed royalty, heads of state and celebrities, as well as hundreds of advertising campaigns and television commercials.
Self-taught photographer Page left England at 17 to travel overland to Asia, launching into the Vietnam War and psychedelic drugs at the same time. His exploits inspired Dennis Hopper’s wigged-out Apocalypse Now character, but five years’ covering conflict took their toll, and Page moved on to documentary work away from war zones. Now 70, he has lost none of his irreverence and daring.
Robert Pledge is the co-founder of photo agency Contact Press Images in New York, which counts Annie Leibovitz, Sebastião Salgado and Frank Fournier among its ranks. Born in London and raised in Paris, Pledge has been immersed in the world of photojournalism since the 1970s. Now in his 70s, he travels the world finding new opportunities for visual storytelling.
American photographer Mary Ellen Mark has been taking pictures for more than 50 years. Her work has appeared in Life, New York Times Magazine, Vanity Fair, Rolling Stone and The New Yorker. But it is her work as a social documentarian that lies at the heart of her practice.
The publisher, photographer and filmmaker on passion and the evolution of a photographer’s voice.
On Wildlife, sentience and awareness and photography
Dan Winters doesn't neatly fit the label of photographer. The American is well known for his celebrity portraiture, his scientific photography, even photo illustrations, collage and drawings. Winters works for editorial and commercial clients including The New Yorker, The New York Times Magazine, Wired, Time, Warner Brothers and Sony BMG.
Magnum photographer Martin Parr is one of the United Kingdom’s most celebrated contemporary photographers. A social documentarian, Parr has spent the past 40 years photographing and critiquing contemporary life through his ironic, unflinching and witty lens.
With a successful editorial and commercial career spanning more than 30 years, Joe McNally has worked for TIME, National Geographic, Sports Illustrated, LIFE, Newsweek, Fortune and The New York Times Magazine.
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