Pictures of the Week: August 2 – August 9
From heavy flooding in Pakistan and Eid al-Fitr celebrations around the world to wildfires in Spain and a Pearl Harbor reenactment at America's largest airshow, TIME presents the best pictures of the week.
From heavy flooding in Pakistan and Eid al-Fitr celebrations around the world to wildfires in Spain and a Pearl Harbor reenactment at America's largest airshow, TIME presents the best pictures of the week.
Photographer Rose-Lynn Fisher creates highly composed photographs of bee parts magnified through a scanning electron microscope.
For his latest exhibition, the Magnum photographer pairs two parallel series he shot in Los Angeles over 44 years apart, documenting the natural landscape of a city best known for anything but.
For our ongoing series on the brave and tireless work of often unsung photojournalists, LightBox presents a selection of the EPA photographer's touching pictures of daily life and the human cost of conflict in the Gaza Strip.
An exclusive interview with Pete Souza on Instagramming the President, the White House, and one of the world's most famous dogs.
TIME LightBox presents our August round-up of the best books, exhibitions and ways to experience photography beyond the web.
From violence in Egypt and the first gay marriages in Rhode Island to Zimbabwe's elections and a purple water cannon at a protest in Kashmir, TIME presents the best pictures of the week.
This week, TIME turned to Austin-based photographer Randal Ford, whose painterly and nostalgic style was perfect for our cover story on childlessness.
Conceptual artist Hank Willis Thomas writes for LightBox about the ideas and motivations behind the innovative transmedia art project Question Bridge: Black Males, which aims to facilitate a dialog between black men from diverse and contending backgrounds and create an interactive platform for representing and redefining black male identity.
At a time when heroin use is rising among teens, Tony Fouhse's powerful new book captures a young woman's recovery from addiction, as well as an unconventional relationship between subject and documentary photographer.
Mosa'ab Elshamy, a 23-year-old photographer in Cairo, photographed the weekend's deadly clashes between pro-Morsi supporters and Egyptian police.