FotoRoom’s Ten Most Popular Features of 2016
2016 was a big year for us: we’ve rebranded our platform to FotoRoom, improved the site’s layout, and launched the Amateur and Pro memberships to offer exclusive features to our most loyal readers. But as always, our main source of joy is the amount of great work that contemporary photographers from all around the world choose to showcase on FotoRoom, something which we’re very grateful to them for. In particular, this year we presented about 200 different works by as many artists—these are the ten that were most popular with our audience:
1. See China’s Brand-New, Empty Cities Waiting to Be Populated
Photos by Kai Caemmerer

2. Brilliant Photographs of Armenia Capture the Country’s State of Transition
Photos by Julien Lombardi

3. Too Black for Mexico — Cécile Smetana Photographs the Afro-Mexican Stigmatized for the Color of Their Skin
Photos by Cécile Smetana

4. Leah Edelman-Brier Confronts Her Fear of Becoming Like Her Mother in Brutally Honets Photos
Photos by Leah Edelma-Brier

5. Owen Harvey Photographs the Mod and Skinhead Subcultures in the UK
Photos by Owen Harvey

6. Dark, Cryptic, Sometimes Gruesome — The Visual Epiphanies of Francesco Merlini
Photos by Francesco Merlini

7. Fuck It — Michele Sibiloni Documents the Non-Stop Nightlife in Kampala, Uganda
Photos by Michele Sibiloni

8. Horses, Blankets and Balaclavas: Stunning Portraits of Lesotho’s Horsemen
Photos by Thom Pierce

9. These Are the Faces of America’s Train Riders
Photos by Michael Joseph

10. Ecstatic Photos of Religious Catholics Interrogate the Relationship between Physicality and Spirituality
Photos by Anna Shimshak

Keep looking...

FotoFirst — Nele Gülck Shot *All* the Items a Couple Accumulated Over 66 Years of Marriage

Leonardo Magrelli Surveys Iran’s ‘Ambiguous’ Landscapes

Lost and Found — Marijane Ceruti Wants to “Show the Grit it Takes to Carry on When Life Is Challenging”

FotoFirst — Matthew Genitempo Photographs the Men Living in Solitude in the Ozark Mountains

FotoFirst — Stunning Portraits of Austin’s Creek Bathers Shot by Joanna Kulesza

Close to Home — Derek Man Exposes the Appalling Reality of Hong Kong’s Subdivided Flats

FotoFirst — Tamara Reynolds Portrays the Marginalized Gravitating Around an Old Motel
