This project was commissioned by ProPublica as part of an investigative series that examined the condition of deteriorating public housing developments near St. Louis.
Like time capsules testifying to a parallel world, Francis Meslet’s melancholic images brave the passage of time, perfect for enabling the mind to wander and ponder, making way for silence following the memories left behind by human inhabitation.
For over a decade the Wet’suwet’en Nation has stood in defense of their last unspoiled territory.
The LGBT community has been specifically targeted since 1979 when the Chinese communist party criminalized the group by including homosexuality in the nonspecific act of hooliganism.
This project discusses social and political issues in Hong Kong using inspiration and references from various objects: matchboxes, half a papaya, a drawing, two passports, and a kid, to show the needs and wants of Hongkongers.
Those who stay can only think about leaving. Those who leave can only dream of returning.
No Surrender: The Protestants provides an intimate look at Northern Ireland’s fractious Protestant neighborhoods.
Our Neighborhood juxtaposes places of daily life with the infrastructure of industrial production. If you live near a factory or refinery, you hear it, you smell it, you know that it can hurt you but you accept it because either you have no choice, or it is your best choice.
‘The Lowriders: From Detroit to L.A. and Back’ is a visual story about the people, processes, places, and products of lowriding coast to coast, with this excerpt centered in Detroit’s lowrider scene.
Beginning in 2015, The Changing Landscape of American Retail is an ongoing documentation of the shift from traditional brick-and-mortar locations where we once socialized and interacted with our community, to the stark and generic, yet essential e-commerce.