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30 October 2023

In this recurring column, we highlight a few items we've run across that don't merit a full story of their own but are interesting enough to bring to your attention. This time we look at AP's Week in Pictures, Bali, the stateless, Dougie Wallace, Mario Heller, Day of the Dead, Chiabella James and Bryan Troll.

  • The Associated Press curates its global Week in Pictures for last week. The selection was curated jointly by AP photo editors Aaron Jackson in New York and Subramoney Iyer in New Delhi.
  • Anna Dorothea Ker features Zissou's images of Bali's Many Faces. "Portraying daily chores and sacred celebrations, the faces of foreigners and locals, they reflect the view of a self-described 'long-term tourist,' who over the course of a decade, has woven himself into the fabric of the Balinese landscape and his local community and who through his presence and participation has earned the respect of its members to bear witness to it," she writes.
  • Inherited State presents the images William Daniels took on a global photographic journey to document the fate of people who find themselves stateless, traveling through India, Nepal, Lebanon and the Dominican Republic.
  • In Zombies and Beetlejuice, Dougie Wallace presents Dougie Wallace's photos of revellers dressed up for pre-Halloween fun in central London on Saturday night.
  • Erik Vroons reviews Mario Heller's series Arctic Dreams. The Berlin-based Swiss photographer trained his lens on Barentsburg, a remote community of about 400 inhabitants in the Arctic region.
  • Kirk Tuck photographed the Day of the Dead Celebration with his Fujifilm GFX 50S II and a 35-70mm zoom lens. "The camera is not the quickest focusing camera in the world but it makes really, really nice files," he writes.
  • Kevin Raber interviews 'Dune' Still Photographer Chiabella James about how she approached the movie's photography. The images have been published in Dune Part One: The Photography.
  • Photographer Bryan Troll dressed as a Canon Camera that actually takes pictures.

More to come! Meanwhile, here's a look five years back. And please support our efforts...


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