#FotoWeb – This Week’s Ten Best Photography Links











#FotoWeb is our guide to the best of photography on the web. At the end of every week, we select the ten photo essays we liked the best from those published across our favorite online photography sites during that week.
Sign up to our weekly newsletter to receive #FotoWeb in your email inbox, or see the previous collections here.
Exploring Mars in the High Desert of Utah
Photos by Cassandra Klos. Via Vantage.

Charro, Portrait to a Way of Life
Photos by Antonio Gomez. Via Lenscratch.

How to Put Colored Girls in the MoMA
Photos by Awol Erizku. Via Dazed.

Crossed Look: Ya Kala Ben
Photos by Namsa Leuba. Via LensCulture.

Chai Wan Fire Station
Photos by Chan Dick. Via LensCulture.

The Arc of Summer
Photos by Jen Ervin. Via Ain’t Bad Magazine.

Photographer Jamie Hawkesworth and His Four-Year Love Affair with Preston Bus Station
Photos by Jamie Hawkesworth. Via It’s Nice That.

The Other Side of Venus
Photos by Anna Charlotte Schmid. Via GUP.

God Listens to Slayer – Meet the World’s Most Committed Metalheads
Photos by Sanna Charles. Via The British Journal of Photography.

Pictures from the Hoo Peninsula
Photos by Michael Collins. Via Another Place.

And here’s a few highlights from our own posts of last week:
Nudity and Taboos – Hannah Saunders and Her Friends Claim Authorship of Their Bodies

Growing Old in Paris’ Suburbs – Stunning Photographs by Laurent Kronental

Space Travels Through Norway

Keep looking...

FotoCal — Photography Awards, Grants and Calls for Entries Closing in November 2019

“They Live and Work and Breathe and Die Right on the Edge” — Portraits by Tracy Chandler

FotoFirst — Tourism, Romance and Identity Come Together in Farah Foudeh’s Series ‘Just Because I Don’t Cry Doesn’t Mean I Am Strong’

Roselena Ramistella’s Lyrical Photographs Capture the Communities Living in Rural Sicily

Tomoya Imamura’s Photos Are Filled with Symbols Referencing Hungary’s History

In These Staged Images, Rydel Cerezo Explores His Relationship with the Catholic Church

We Are the Ones Turning — Ana Zibelnik Reflects on the Ideas of Death and Time
