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Photographing the Last Days of Life: What Sibylle Fendt Discovered About Trust, Presence, and Death as Part of Life
Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/31/26 Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/31/26

Photographing the Last Days of Life: What Sibylle Fendt Discovered About Trust, Presence, and Death as Part of Life

Death is part of life and Sibylle Fendt photographs it. She does this by spending time with people who are dying at home, together with their families. Photography Book Spotlight

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How Mario Schneider Captures Intimacy on New York’s Streets
Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/29/26 Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/29/26

How Mario Schneider Captures Intimacy on New York’s Streets

Mario Schneider photographs New York by disappearing into it. He does not chase landmarks or famous places, but watches people until they forget he is there. Photography Book Spotlight

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Inside the World’s Most Secret Food Facilities: Gregor Sailer on Access, Control, and the Illusion of Plenty
Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/27/26 Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/27/26

Inside the World’s Most Secret Food Facilities: Gregor Sailer on Access, Control, and the Illusion of Plenty

These facilities feed millions while remaining completely hidden. They are insect farms, jellyfish labs, vertical greenhouses, virus institutes, and high-security research centers spread across the world. Photography Book Spotlight

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From Fog to Golden Hour: How Joshua Amirthasingh’s Tales from the City Finds Quiet Moments Inside a Loud City
Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/21/26 Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/21/26

From Fog to Golden Hour: How Joshua Amirthasingh’s Tales from the City Finds Quiet Moments Inside a Loud City

Early mornings, fog, and an empty San Francisco street. Instead of chasing big moments, he focused on small scenes, quiet corners, and light that changes fast. Photography Book Spotlight

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Photographing the American West Without Romance: Isabelle Arnon on Ranch Life, Labor, and Reality
Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/17/26 Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/17/26

Photographing the American West Without Romance: Isabelle Arnon on Ranch Life, Labor, and Reality

The American West did not disappear. Isabelle Arnon lived it. She did not pass through for a few weeks or photograph from the outside. Photography Book Spotlight

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Living Normally in an Abnormal Place: Pierpaolo Mittica on Photographing Workers, Families, and Faith Inside Chernobyl
Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/15/26 Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/15/26

Living Normally in an Abnormal Place: Pierpaolo Mittica on Photographing Workers, Families, and Faith Inside Chernobyl

What does everyday life look like inside Chernobyl? For many people, Chernobyl still means empty buildings, danger, and silence. But this place is not only ruins and abandoned rooms. Photography Book Spotlight

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What Happens When You Photograph Climate Change Using the Thing That’s Disappearing? Tristan Duke Explains Glacial Optics
Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/13/26 Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/13/26

What Happens When You Photograph Climate Change Using the Thing That’s Disappearing? Tristan Duke Explains Glacial Optics

What happens when climate change becomes the camera lens itself? Instead of photographing climate change in a traditional way, he uses melting glacier ice as the actual camera lens. Photography Book Spotlight

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Why Kentaro Kumon Believes Nothing Is Ordinary Once You Learn How to Look
Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/11/26 Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/11/26

Why Kentaro Kumon Believes Nothing Is Ordinary Once You Learn How to Look

Photography begins long before you press the shutter. For Kentaro Kumon, photography starts with time, walking, and learning a place before taking pictures. Photography Book Spotlight

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Survivors Sitting Next To Perpetrators: How Jan Banning Documented Reconciliation In Post-Genocide Rwanda
Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/9/26 Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/9/26

Survivors Sitting Next To Perpetrators: How Jan Banning Documented Reconciliation In Post-Genocide Rwanda

What does forgiveness look like after genocide? In Rwanda, Jan Banning photographed survivors sitting next to the people who killed their families. Photography Book Spotlight

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Night Walks in Tama New Town: Sakaguchi Tomoyuki’s GOING HOME
Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/5/26 Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/5/26

Night Walks in Tama New Town: Sakaguchi Tomoyuki’s GOING HOME

Every night, Sakaguchi Tomoyuki waited at empty intersections. He stood there with a tripod, often for hours, in the quiet streets of Tama New Town. Photography Book Spotlight

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What Happens When You Photograph the Same Strangers Every Morning for Nearly a Decade? Peter Funch Explains
Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/3/26 Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/3/26

What Happens When You Photograph the Same Strangers Every Morning for Nearly a Decade? Peter Funch Explains

Peter Funch photographed the same strangers every morning for years. He stood on the same New York street corner and watched people repeat their daily routines. Photography Book Spotlight

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Can You Still Say Something New About the Golden Gate Bridge? Arthur Drooker Gave Himself 3 Rules and 36 Photos to Find Out
Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/1/26 Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 1/1/26

Can You Still Say Something New About the Golden Gate Bridge? Arthur Drooker Gave Himself 3 Rules and 36 Photos to Find Out

Can a famous landmark still surprise a photographer Arthur Drooker asked this question while crossing the Golden Gate Bridge in 2022. Photography Book Spotlight

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Tokyo From 1,500 Feet: How Yoichi Yoshinaga Finds Human Stories in the City’s Railways and Rooftops
Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 12/28/25 Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 12/28/25

Tokyo From 1,500 Feet: How Yoichi Yoshinaga Finds Human Stories in the City’s Railways and Rooftops

Tokyo looks different when you stop walking and start flying. Yoichi Yoshinaga photographs the city from small planes and helicopters, high above the streets. Photography Book Spotlight

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Photographing Silence: Elizabeth Sanjuan on Stillness, Subtle Color, and Restraint in Silent Snow
Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 12/26/25 Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 12/26/25

Photographing Silence: Elizabeth Sanjuan on Stillness, Subtle Color, and Restraint in Silent Snow

Elizabeth Sanjuan spent years photographing what barely changes. She returned again and again to winter landscapes in Hokkaido, Japan. Photography Book Spotlight

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Inside a Book Built on Chance: How Christopher Lee Captures Moments You Cannot Plan
Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 12/24/25 Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 12/24/25

Inside a Book Built on Chance: How Christopher Lee Captures Moments You Cannot Plan

What happens when a photographer trusts chaos more than control? Christopher Lee builds his work on moments that appear without warning. Photography Book Spotlight

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The art of self-portrait: How Danielle L Goldstein Transformed Hundreds of Hotel Rooms Into a Visual Diary
Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 12/22/25 Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 12/22/25

The art of self-portrait: How Danielle L Goldstein Transformed Hundreds of Hotel Rooms Into a Visual Diary

A ledge in a Spanish hotel room changed everything. It was the moment that pushed Danielle L Goldstein to photograph herself for the first time in a quiet, unfamiliar space. Photography Book Spotlight

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The Real Story Behind Janet Delaney’s Book: Photographing Beauty Shops, Hard Work, and Family History
Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 12/20/25 Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 12/20/25

The Real Story Behind Janet Delaney’s Book: Photographing Beauty Shops, Hard Work, and Family History

A sales route became an unexpected photographic archive. It started as a simple week following Janet Delaney’s father on his beauty shop route in Los Angeles. Photography Book Spotlight

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How Eduardo Ortiz Uses Color Theory to Make Street Photos That Feel Cinematic and Balanced
Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 12/17/25 Photography Book Spotlight Martin Kaninsky 12/17/25

How Eduardo Ortiz Uses Color Theory to Make Street Photos That Feel Cinematic and Balanced

Great color photography isn’t about saturation. It’s about balance. Eduardo Ortiz understands how colors work together and how they affect the mood of a photo. Photography Book Spotlight

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