FotoWeb – This Week’s Ten Best Photography Links
FotoWeb is your weekly guide to the best of photography on the web. This week we loved Tine Poppe’s and Omar Victor Diop’s works on immigration, which have a different approach to the subject matter but both make use of color as a predominant element. We also enjoyed Ilyes Griyeb’s photos of youth in Morocco and the fantastic selection of Eastern European portrait photographers made by The Calvert Journal. Finally, big thanks to the LensCulture team for having a chat about FotoMarket with Fotografia’s founder Graziano Ferri – have a read and contribute to the FotoMarket campaign!
See below for the full list of this week’s best photography links, and sign up to our weekly newsletter to receive next week’s FotoWeb in your email inbox!

Photos by Birthe Piontek. Via Thisispaper.

In this interview with LensCulture, Fotografia’s founder Graziano Ferri shares some insight into FotoMarket and the world of photobooks in general. Have a read and contribute to the FotoMarket campaign!

Photos by Tine Poppe. Via GUP.

Photos by Omar Victor Diop. Via Proof.

Photos by Ilyes Griyeb. Via Another Something.

Photos by Ilia Yefimovich. Via YET.

Photos by various artists (above image by Tatiana Vinogradova). Via The Calvert Journal.

Photos by Allison Morris. Via Ignant.

Photos by Mikael Lafontan. Via Phases.

Photos by Victor Cobo. Via American Photo.
Here’s a few highlights of our own posts of this week:



Keep looking...

Afterparty — Jussi Puikkonen Photographs Party Venues After the Parties Have Ended

Inzajeano Latif Has Been Taking Portraits of the People of Tottenham For Over Ten Years

FotoFirst — Gender Shifts Are Terrifying American Straight White Men, Shawn Bush’s Photos Say

FotoFirst — Federico Vespignani Follows a Youth Gang of One of the World’s Most Violent Cities

Atsushi Momoi Uses His Computer’s Screensaver to Visualize How Memory Works

Sem Langendijk Documents The Squatters That Established Their Community in Amsterdam’s Docklands

FotoFirst — Michael Radford Researches the Visual Foundations of the ‘Machine of Whiteness’
