Most Seen Series of March 2017
It comes as no surprise that FotoRoom‘s most seen feature of those we published this March was our recent interview with celebrated American photographer Todd Hido—if you missed it, give it a read and take a look at a portfolio of some of the best images he shot over the first 25 years of his career.
Second most seen was Swiss photographer Arunà Canevascini‘s series Villa Argentina: through surrealist self-portraits, portraits of her mother and still lifes, the work questions the obedient role expected of women in most contemporary societies. Next up is You Are Mine by Russian photographer Mary Gelman: in a way, this project shares common ground with Arunà’s Villa Argentina as it’s a set of portraits of Russian young women victims of intimate partner violence. The fourth most popular series this March was Lovely Planet: Poland, a humorous parody of the well-known travel guide books by German photographer Jakob Ganslmeier. Italian-Moroccan photographer Karim El Maktafi closes the group with Hayati, a fascinating project entirely shot on a smartphone that examines Karim’s multicultural background, and that we were very happy to launch on FotoRoom as a FotoFirst project.
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Keep looking...

The Flowers of Kosmet — Emanuele Occhipinti Shows Us the Conditions of the Serb Minority in Kosovo

Julia De Cooker Photographs the Unexpectedly Modern Life in the Svalbard Archipelago

In the Truth — Toms Harjo Explores the Difficulties of Being a Young Jehovah’s Witness

Everything Everywhere — Helen Korpak Follows the Traces of Worldwide Globalization

Emanuele Amighetti Photographs the Teenage Soldiers of Nagorno-Karabakh

FotoFirst — Paola Serino Portrays the Young Students of a Prestigious Fencing Academy

Best of 2017 — Top Ten Projects Shot in Black and White
