#FotoWeb – This Week’s Ten Best Photography Links











#FotoWeb is our weekly guide to the best of photography on the web. This week (15 – 21 November) we loved Pavel Tereshkovets’ photographs of the American landscape, Ariane Pfannschmidt’s great portraits of the inhabitants of Guyana, Lisa Lindvay’s arresting photos of her own family, Kevin Tadge’s unusual look at museum exhibits and many other links – find them all below.
Sign up to our weekly newsletter to receive #FotoWeb in your email inbox, or see the previous collections here.
Peripheral Driftwood
Photos by Ariane Pfannschmidt. Via GUP.

Mind Your Business: Preserving the Bargain Basements of Tallin
Photos by Vladimir Ljadov. Via The Calvert Journal.

American Prayer
Photos by Pavel Tereshkovets. Via Ain’t Bad Magazine.

See India through Steve McCurry’s Lens
Photos by Steve McCurry. Via Lightbox.

Guided Tour
Photos by Kevin Tadge. Via Phases.

Snowy Journey
Photos by Mitsuharu Maeda. Via LensCulture.

Hold Together
Photos by Lisa Lindvay. Via Juxtapoz.

Uman
Photos by Chris Occhicone. Via Burn.

A Beautiful New Series Mixing High Fashion and Small-Town Faces
Photos by Tom Johnson. Via It’s Nice That.

Hackney by Night
Photos by David George. Via Another | Place.

And here’s a few highlights from our own posts of this week:
Ten Photographers You Should Follow on Instagram Vol. 6

Discover the Beautiful Landscape Photography of Simon Deadman

“Chaotic, dirty, dusty, colorful” – Vincent Delbrouck Shows Us His Nepal

Keep looking...

How Love Changes — Jane Hilton Juxtaposes Portraits of Young Couples and Widows

FotoFirst — Terry Ratzlaff Portrays the People Looking for Sex Online

FotoFirst — New Cinematic Photobook Explores Residential Segregation in St. Louis

Tempora Morte — Lia Darjes Creates Painterly Still Lifes at Kaliningrad’s Roadside Markets

Rani Road — Saleem Ahmed Shares Poetic Photographs of His Parents’ Hometown in India

In the Vicinity — Ed Panar Roams Around California’s Heartland of Cannabis Cultivation

Midwest Sentimental — Nathaniel Grann Explores the Idea of Family Thorugh Images of His Own One
