Sofia Bohdanowicz and Deragh Campbell occupy a rare space in the Toronto film scene. You canβt discuss one without mentioning the other. The duo bring their latest collaboration home with Point and
Keep ReadingHelmut Newton: The Bad and the Beautiful (USA, 93 min.) Dir. Gero von Boehm Only aΒ photographerΒ as daring as Helmut Newton could make roast chicken look sexy. The man sure knew how to
Keep ReadingWhen this issue was planned, COVID-19 was in the distance, nothing but a series of news reports from Asia. For a month, I was corresponding with writers and conducting interviews from France,
Keep ReadingDon Dixon discusses his 'Canadian Icons' portrait series of which our cover shot of Robbie Robertson for issue #111 is now a part.
Keep ReadingβYou are going to roam the Russian border zone with a bunch of cameras? GOOD IDEA.β Travels between Latvia and Russia weave a Latvian-Canadian photographer into a landscape of past and present.
Keep ReadingThe Times of Bill Cunningham director Mark Bozek discusses his process of covering the extensive life and career of fashion photographer Bill Cunningham, combing through the archives, and being played by Bradley
Keep ReadingCarrie Mae Weems , who is the subject of the major career retrospective at this yearβs ScotiabankΒ CONTACTΒ Photography FestivalΒ in Toronto, began her artistic career in the late β70s, when she started producingΒ Family Pictures
Keep ReadingBeauty and Decay (Germany, 79 min.) Dir. Annekatrin Hendel Programme: Artscapes (International Premiere) When director Annekatrin Hendel introducedΒ Beauty and DecayΒ at Hot Docs, she invited audiences to experience a country that hasnβt existed
Keep ReadingShooting the Mafia (Ireland, 94 min.) Dir. Kim Longinotto Programme: Artscapes (Canadian Premiere) Kim Longinotto turns her lens on Letizia Battaglia, an 83-year-old photographer who helped document the violence that has plagued
Keep ReadingGarry Winogrand: All Things Are Photographable (USA, 90 min.) Dir. Sasha Waters Freyer Thereβs a photograph by the street-wise photo artist Garry Winogrand that haunts me. In the photo, six women are
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