Echolilia: A Father’s Photographic Conversation with his Autistic Son
We were preparing a special issue on children and mental health, and photographer Timothy Archibald’s project “Echolilia” came to mind. Archibald had photographed his son Elijah, who suffers from...
View ArticleAndy McMillan’s PTL Series: What Remains of Pastor Jim Bakker’s Former Ministry
In March 1987, almost 24 years ago, pastor Jim Bakker resigned from Praise the Lord (PTL), a ministry he had built from the ground up that inspired a cable-TV show, a 501-room luxury hotel, an...
View ArticleBloodstains and Bullet Holes: Rare Civil War Artifacts by Henry Leutwyler
In honor of the 150th anniversary of the U.S. Civil War, TIME sent photographer Henry Leutwyler to The National Civil War Museum in Harrisburg, Pa. to photograph 185 artifacts, from powder horns to...
View ArticleUp in the Air: Kite Photography
The field of kite aerial photography started around the late 1800s, giving photo buffs their first birds-eye view of the world. Used by photographers to capture novel views of cities, kite photography...
View ArticleFreedom Riders: Bruce Davidson on his Awakening
The Freedom Riders, a group of 13 students organized by Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), set out on Greyhound and Trailways buses on May 4, 1961 to ride from Washington, DC to New Orleans, intent on...
View ArticleGreg Miller’s Waiting For…
One way to capture the truth with a camera is to take the subject unawares, to freeze an event as it happens—a war, a wedding, a big game, a sudden catastrophe. Photographer Greg Miller goes after the...
View ArticleDr. Carver’s Diving Horse Act
The diving horse act was allegedly started by Dr. W.F. Carver in the late 1880′s while crossing a partially collapsed bridge on horseback. As both rider and horse plummeted, the horse dove straight...
View ArticleThe Berlin Wall – Don McCullin’s Lost Negatives
Most people can still remember scenes from the wild days and nights of November 1989, when after decades of division, jubilant Germans tore down the Berlin Wall. But fewer can recall how the city...
View ArticleSounds of the Soil
Sounds of the Soil is a journey through the poetic Rajasthan region of India by photographer Dustin Aksland. The following images were shot during the first leg of a three week trip – a seven-day road...
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