A Changed Landscape for Abortion Rights in Texas
After access to abortion services were curtailed by Texas law, a photographer set out to document women on both sides of the debate. Read more »
Credit Carolyn Van Houten/San Antonio Express-News
After access to abortion services were curtailed by Texas law, a photographer set out to document women on both sides of the debate. Read more »
After access to abortion services were curtailed by Texas law, a photographer set out to document women on both sides of the debate. Read more »
After access to abortion services were curtailed by Texas law, a photographer set out to document women on both sides of the debate. Read more »
Credit Fred Ramos/El Faro
The tattoos inked onto the bodies and faces of former gang members in El Salvador make a new start nearly impossible. A photographer followed and documented one former gang member. Read more »
Credit Beth Dubber
Beth Dubber has been photographing L.A. for a decade, offering a decidedly lighthearted take on street photography in a city not known for it.Read more »
Credit Charlie Cordero
Santa Cruz del Islote has gone from being uninhabited to perhaps the densest island in the world. With no police — or any of the usual municipal services — its residents manage to live harmoniously. In short, it’s a metaphor for what could be.Read more »
Credit Stephen Crowley/The New York Times
Stephen Crowley, who has retired after 25 years of photographing Washington and politics, on working for The Times, the changes he’s seen in the country, and on what’s next. Read more »
Credit Miles Aldridge
The second Photo Vogue Festival will continue the debate over what is and isn’t acceptable in fashion photography, with an exhibition titled “Fashion & Politics” that brings together some of the magazine’s most tendentious shoots. Read more »
Credit Fred R. Conrad
Fred Conrad, a former staff photographer for The New York Times, has been documenting the Rockland Boulders baseball team’s friendship with each other and love for their sport.Read more »
Credit Elliott Erwitt/Magnum Photos/Courtesy of Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh
Recently discovered early work by Elliott Erwitt shows Pittsburgh at the cusp of transforming from a gritty industrial city to a livable, cultural hub.Read more »
Credit Jesus Emmanuel
Jesus Emmanuel Rodriguez Pichardo returned to Puerto Rico to photograph his old abandoned high school, which was one of many to close because of the island’s economic collapse. Read more »
Credit Néha Hirve
Women Photograph, a new organization dedicated to helping female visual journalists address obstacles in photojournalism, has announced the recipients of its first grants to support personal projects.Read more »
Credit Jose Colon/MeMo
Jose Colon has been in Morocco’s Rif region, where anger over disrespect and corruption has exploded.Read more »
Credit Pablo Blazquez Dominguez/Getty Images
Credit Adam Dean for The New York Times
Credit Ivor Prickett for The New York Times
Credit European Pressphoto Agency
Lens is the photojournalism blog of The New York Times, presenting the finest and most interesting visual and multimedia reporting -- photographs, videos and slide shows. A showcase for Times photographers, it also seeks to highlight the best work of other newspapers, magazines and news and picture agencies; in print, in books, in galleries, in museums and on the Web. And it will draw on The Times's own pictorial archive, numbering in the millions of images and going back to the early 20th century. E-mail us tips, story suggestions and ideas to lens@nytimes.com.