Jazper Jack – Keeper of Vanishing Cultures
In the remote landscapes of Northeast India, where forests hold centuries-old secrets and tribes carry forward fragile legacies, Jazper Jack has spent over a decade listening, watching, and documenting.
Monika K. Adler – Between Crowds and Horizons
For Monika Adler, photography is more than a way of seeing - it is a way of navigating life’s paradoxes. Her work moves between the anonymous rhythm of the city and the wild, ever-changing pulse of the sea.
Anjan Ghosh – Stories from the Heart of Rural India
In a world that moves fast and often overlooks the unpolished corners of life, photographer Anjan Ghosh turns his lens to the people and places that many pass by. His work doesn’t chase spectacle or grandeur.
Listening With the Eyes – The Photography of Arturo Lopez
Arturo Lopez walks into a place looking for truth. For what slips past the noise of the world – the overlooked, the gestures that most of us never notice. “I travel with my camera not in search of beauty, but in pursuit of truth,” he says.
The Human Fragment – Paul van Walree’s Search for Presence
For Paul, it began with a child’s curiosity - and a broken plastic camera. Growing up in a small historical town in the Netherlands, he remembers photographing his friends in primary school, eager to preserve what was in front of him.
The Atmosphere Between Us – Antje Clausmeyer’s Way of Seeing
Some photographers look for faces, for expressions, for the unmistakable stamp of individuality. Antje looks elsewhere. Since 2021, her lens has been drawn to something more elusive - the atmospheres that hang between people and places.
The Gaze That Finds the Invisible – Marika’s Fragments of Emotion
Some people see the world. Marika feels it. Her photography begins in a split second - an instinct as primal as breath. A flash in the corner of her vision. A flicker that dares her to look closer. In that instant, she knows she must take the shot. It’s not a choice. It’s an adrenaline surge that races from her eyes, through her hands, into the lens. An electricity that demands to be preserved.
The Distance Between Us: Bridging Cultures Through France Leclerc’s Lens
France Leclerc’s journey into photography wasn’t born from a childhood dream or a technical obsession. It didn’t begin with shutter speeds or lighting setups. It began, instead, with a question: How do we understand one another, across all the invisible lines that separate us? For much of her life, France studied human behavior in classrooms and lecture halls. As an academic, she was trained to analyze — to dissect patterns, question assumptions, and find meaning in human action. But ev
In the Company of Strangers: The Photographic Journey of Zahed Hassan
In the heart of a small coastal town called Kakinada, a boy grew up with books and a restless imagination. Zahed Hassan didn't know it then, but all those pages he turned—filled with stories, people, and places—were quietly shaping how he would one day see the world through a lens. He didn’t pick up a camera to chase perfection. He picked it up to understand people. It started near the sea, with fishermen silhouetted against a rising sun. The ocean was his first muse—fluid, honest, eve
Shadows, Ruins, and the Theater of the Mind – Lucia Bottegoni
When Lucia Bottegoni first picked up a camera during the pandemic, she wasn’t looking for a profession – she was looking for a release. What began as a way to pass time and distract herself slowly transformed into a ritual of exploration. With an old mobile phone and a restless spirit, she wandered into forgotten places, drawn by contradiction. It wasn’t the clean lines or picturesque views that moved her – it was decay, abandonment, and stillness that breathed of stories untold. “I l