Fotografia’s Five Most Seen Posts of March 2016
Our most seen post this month were American photographer Leah Edelman-Brier‘s powerful photos of her mother and sister – an unsanitized confrontation with what the future holds for her and her body, in particular.
Second up were American photographer Michael Joseph‘s portraits of the USA’s train hoppers, a group of young adults who constantly move throughout the country hopping from one train to another. Subcultures and alternative lifestyles are also at the center of British photographer Owen Harvey‘s work, whose pictures of the UK’s Mods and Skinheads ranked third in this month’s top five. Right behind Harvey we find American photographer Mark Fitton and his subtly provocative photos in which he introduces himself in his parents’ intimacy. Finally, Portuguese photographer Edgar Martins joins the group with his conceptual study of how to represent violent death and suicide in a new way, made in collaboration with Portugal’s Institute of Legal Medicine.
Take a second look at this month’s five most seen posts, and sign up to our weekly newsletter to make sure you don’t miss one bit of our content.





Keep looking...

‘Dream the End’ by Dorje De Burgh Is a “semi-imagined mapping” of His Relationship with His Mother

Void x #FotoRoomOPEN — Announcing the Single Images Winner and 12 Shortlisted Photographers in the Series Category

Enter #FotoRoomOPEN and Have a Solo Exhibition at foto forum

There’s a ‘Happy Club’ in One of England’s Most Deprived Regions (Photos by Sandra Mickiewicz)

In ‘The Sapper’, Bharat Sikka Uses Photography to Re-Discover His Father

It Turns Out Pankisi, the ‘Valley of Terror’, Isn’t So Terrifying After All

Looking West — Laurence Watts Explores Australia’s Rodeo Subculture
