Entranced by magical tales of her parents’ Ukrainian homeland, Lida Suchy traveled there almost 25 years ago to find a reality far removed from their stories. Nevertheless, it held a magic of its own for her.Read more »
Entranced by magical tales of her parents’ Ukrainian homeland, Lida Suchy traveled there almost 25 years ago to find a reality far removed from their stories. Nevertheless, it held a magic of its own for her.Read more »
Entranced by magical tales of her parents’ Ukrainian homeland, Lida Suchy traveled there almost 25 years ago to find a reality far removed from their stories. Nevertheless, it held a magic of its own for her.Read more »
Amid a vast archive of Cuban photos, two children of exile search for meaning when the Revolution was young and Fidel Castro was portrayed in ordinary, everyday moments.Read more »
In “Vintage Black Glamour: Gentlemen’s Quarters,” Nichelle Gainer explores how prominent and accomplished black men shaped their image through personal style, taking charge of how they were seen to defy stereotypes. Read more »
Over the past year, Diego Ibarra Sánchez has traveled to Sinjar, Iraq, whose Yazidi population was subjected to atrocities by the Islamic State.Read more »
When Arthur Bondar came across the negatives of a Soviet war photographer, he realized he had stumbled upon an important cache of images of World War II that gave an intimate look at that country’s side.Read more »
After almost being killed in New Jersey, a Guatemalan immigrant returned to his hometown to help provide jobs and training so people won’t have to leave.Read more »
In British Bikelife, Dan Giannopoulos has captured bikers at rest and at play, in standoffs with the police, but above all doing the thing they love most.Read more »
Even as she fought cancer, the singer Sharon Jones lived for the stage as a powerful, soulful presence. From legendary theaters to sweltering Midwest venues, she gave it her best.Read more »
A new book features the photography of Jack London, along with his words, chronicling poverty in London and the aftermath of the San Francisco earthquake.Read more »
Matthew Abbott’s large-format photos of the outback have an eerie, bleak quality, with imperfections from dust and grime only adding to the mystery. Read more »
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.