Most Seen Series of April 2017
The most seen series out of all those we published this April was Origins, a set of fascinating black and white images shot by American photographer Rachel Jump. The photographs embody fragments of memories from Rachel’s own personal life, and her relationships with her loved ones.
The second most seen series this April was Neither Beginning Nor End by Malaysian photographer Peter Teh: at 42, Peter finds the courage to come to terms with his identity in discreet but powerful images. Irish photographer Éanna de Fréine—the juror of our recently closed open call Human Environments—follows with Tales from Beneath the Arches, a landscape photography series that examines the über-urbanized cities of Taiwan. Fourth place for English photographer Adrian Saker and his Subtopia, a dystopic look at life in suburbs across the UK. Indian photographer Bharat Sikka closes the top five with The Marlborough Theatre, a series of staged portraits of members of the LGBT community in the city of Brighton.
Take a second look at April’s most seen series and sign up for our weekly newsletter to make sure you never miss any bit of our future features.





Keep looking...

FotoFirst — Marshall Scheuttle Shares His Personal, Unstereotyped Vision of Las Vegas

400 Pairs of Twins in 2000 Families — Sameer Raichur Portrays the Twins of Kodinhi

Kenny Hurtado Photographs the Woods and People of California’s Emerald Triangle

Bedroom Tales — Jacopo Paglione Portrays Millennials He Met Online In Their Bedrooms

Kushal Gupta Portrays the Devotees of India’s Increasingly Polluted Yumana River

Aerotropolis — Giulio Di Sturco Explores the Airport-Based Metropolises of the Future

FotoCal — Photography awards, grants and calls for entries closing in September 2018
