Two-Wheel Therapy, by Jon Greany
If you would like to have your photography considered for internationalpsychoanalysis.net’s Photography Friday, please send your jpegs to Joel Seligmann, the Photography Editor.
Two-Wheel Therapy, by Jon Greany
If you would like to have your photography considered for internationalpsychoanalysis.net’s Photography Friday, please send your jpegs to Joel Seligmann, the Photography Editor.
Click Here to Read: Mary Ellen Mark: Photographer and humanist By Seraphine Collins on the World Socialist Web Site on July 16, 2015.
Mary Ellen Mark and husband Martin Bell at the 2011 Look 3 Conference: Photo John Ramspott
The Left Eye, by Tomoko Imashiro
If you would like to have your photography considered for internationalpsychoanalysis.net’s Photography Friday, please send your jpegs to Joel Seligmann, the Photography Editor.
Click Here to Read: Illuminating North Korea in The New York Times on June 10, 2015. Scroll down for the two articles.
Published in 1983, this is a collection of in-the-field guidance given to North Korean journalists by the leader Kim Jong-il, who died in 2011. One chapter, devoted to the craft of photojournalism, is titled, “Press the Shutter When You Are Sure of Success.”
Click Here to View: Review: Japanese Photographers Reflect on the Fukushima Catastrophe in The New York Times on June 19, 2015.
Slide Show | ‘In the Wake: Japanese Photographers Respond to 3/11’ Art photographs at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, focus on the aftermath of a disaster in Japan.
If you would like to have your photography considered for internationalpsychoanalysis.net’s Photography Friday, please send your jpegs to Joel Seligmann, the Photography Editor.
Click Here to Read: 10 Jaw-Dropping Photos From The 2015 National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest by Carly Ledbetter in The Huffington Post on May 11, 2015.
“I was out in the Arches National Park to take night pictures, but the clouds moved in. I waited for about two hours in the car and finally the sky cleared and I got this image.”
Photograph and caption by Manish Mamtani/National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest
Click Here to Read: A photographer took 12 stunning pictures to capture how depression and anxiety can feel curatored by Laura Willard on the Upworthy website.