Fighting for Basic Rights in Morocco
Jose Colon has been in Morocco’s Rif region, where anger over disrespect and corruption has exploded.Read more »
Jose Colon has been in Morocco’s Rif region, where anger over disrespect and corruption has exploded.Read more »
Jose Colon has been in Morocco’s Rif region, where anger over disrespect and corruption has exploded.Read more »
Jose Colon has been in Morocco’s Rif region, where anger over disrespect and corruption has exploded.Read more »
Haight-Ashbury’s flower-bedecked hippie scene may have gotten most of the attention during 1967’s Summer of Love, but Nathan Farb’s photos from the Lower East Side that summer show a grittier side. Read more »
Harf Zimmermann recorded the day-to-day of his East German neighborhood during the ’80s. Read more »
As Venezuela’s political crisis deepens, young people are desperate to find a resolution to a crisis they have inherited from their elders.Read more »
Igor Posner returned to St. Petersburg looking for the “half-seen, half-recollected” moments that had stayed in his mind since he left Russia in the early 1990s. Read more »
After witnessing teachers, pupils and schools caught in the crossfire of war, Diego Ibarra Sánchez began working on “Hijacked Education,” which examines how constant conflict has upended education.Read more »
Once there were thousands of Lenin statues in Ukraine. Today there are none officially standing, so Niels Ackermann and Sebastien Gobert set out to discover where they ended up.Read more »
Charmaine Poh explores the almost-unnoticed passage from childhood to adulthood, looking at the expectations placed upon women.Read more »
Anita Pouchard Serra has been documenting several Argentine collectives that help community groups set up independent radio stations. Read more »
In “Mitochondria,” Nona Faustine celebrates the lives of three generations of African-American women living under one roof.Read more »
A show at the Cartier Foundation in Paris explores the lasting romance between photographers and automobiles in images of beauty as well as blight.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.