Top Ten Editors’ Picks for 2016
Yesterday we revealed the ten most popular features we published here on FotoRoom in 2016. It includes a tight selection of works, so by all means be sure to check it out if you haven’t yet; but the number of times an article gets seen is often related to how many times it gets shared on social media or picked up by other sites, which is a process that depends on several variables. So we’ve decided to also create a list of ten editors’ picks to make sure you’re *really* not skipping on any of the very best of FotoRoom‘s 2016. Here they are, in no particular order:
Katrin Koenning Fills the Distance between Her and Her Relatives with Poetic Photographs
Photos by Katrin Koenning

Come on a Journey to the World’s First Entirely Green City (in the Middle of the Desert)
Photos by Etienne Malapert

Alexander Missen Tracks Down the Symbols of American Culture
Photos by Alexander Missen

Post — Marta Zgierska Puts in Pictures the Impact of Traumatic Events
Photos by Marta Zgierska

How Photography Saved Igor Pisuk from His Alcohol Addiction
Photos by Igor Pisuk

Gregory Halpern on his Los Angeles Photos Published in New, Beautiful Photobook ‘ZZYZX’
Photos by Gregory Halpern

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

Transparency Is the New Mystery — Mayumi Hosokura’s Latest, Mesmerizing Work
Photos by Mayumi Hosokura

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

Horsehead Nebula — On a Journey to the Breathtaking Landscapes of Faristan
Photos by Matthieu Litt

Keep looking...

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

FotoCal — Photography Awards, Grants and Open Calls Closing in October 2017

These Apparently Ordinary Places Hide a Horrible, Horrible Past

Between Media Representation and Reality: the Identity Crisis of the American West
