What’s Happening in Photo: 11 Stories We’re Reading This Week
A vintage Leica sells for $15 million, making it the most expensive camera ever sold. Advances in artificial intelligence give artists a run for their money. One photographer builds a flying dingy for a good cause, while across the world, another documents the second March for Our Lives rally using an 8x10 large format camera. 10 photographers celebrate Juneteenth by telling stories of Black families, across generations. From all corners of the web, here’s what we’re reading this week. “Photography project becomes bird conservation awareness platform” [CGTN] “$15 million Leica camera was owned by the man who democratized photography” [New Atlas] For Juneteenth, Black photographers share family heirlooms [The New York Times] “Photorealistic AI images have arrived. Are artists in trouble?” [The Sydney Morning Herald] “A visual record of the artifacts that accumulate after school shootings.” [The Atlantic] “Photographer flies homemade boat over Solomon Islands to raise money for charity” [Metro] In Washington, marchers rally for stricter gun regulations: “This cannot continue” [NPR] “Facebook Will Soon Feel a Lot Like TikTok” [PetaPixel] “Whale tale: humpbacks migrate off eastern Australia – in pictures” [The Guardian] “How to Produce a Photobook” [Aperture] “The Current Frontrunners for Bird Photographer of the Year 2022” [PetaPixel] Want more photo opportunities, news, inspiration and events? Consider a subscription to Feature Shoot:
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