Fotografia’s Five Most Seen Posts of April 2016
Of the series we featured this month in Fotografia, the most seen was Farang, a set of photographs which captures a range of very diverse and unrelated scenes witnessed by Italian photographer Francesco Merlini during his travels, but bound together by Francesco’s gritty black&white.
Second most seen was the work of another Italian photographer, Michele Sibiloni: we shared with you Michele’s portrayal of the wild nights out in Kampala, Uganda’s capital city, now available in the Fuck It photobook. Next was Australian photographer Katrin Koenning‘s beautiful and poetic photographs that celebrate the beauty of the world as an antidote to being distant to the ones we love. Polish photographer Marta Zgierska follows with Post, a body of work which explores the impact of traumatic events through a series of symbolic and carefully crafted still lifes. Finally, among the most seen posts of this April was the work of Hungarian photographer Alíz Veronika Ács, who combines very interesting reflections on what we might intend as witchcraft in contemporary societies with intriguing experimentations with the physical photographs.
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...

Matija Brumen’s Nocturnal Photos Transform Ordinary Urban Objects into Fascinating Sculptures

Abendlied — Birthe Piontek Documents the Impact of Her Mother’s Dementia on Her Family

Enter #FotoRoomOPEN for a Chance to Have Your Work Published by Void

FotoFirst — Alex Huanfa Cheng Has Been Taking Intimate Photos of His Partner Zhiyu For 6 Years

Federico Aimar Found 900 Photos Shot in the Early 20th Century in Abandoned Mountain House

Inside the Spider — Suzie Howell Captures the Beauty (and Waste) of East London’s Marshes

Lewis Brillet Reflects on His Experiences of Home and Family After the Death of His Brother
