Discover Photography Artists
Browse our curated selection of artists working in Photography
Humberto Rivas
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Rivas's photographs capture the quiet beauty of everyday life. His black-and-white images, often devoid of human presence, evoke a sense of solitude and introspection.
Miguel Angel Rojas
Bogotá, Colombia
Rojas's work confronts social and political issues in Colombia. His drawings, photographs, and installations often address themes of violence, power, and sexuality.
Carlos Leppe
Santiago, Chile
Leppe's performance art and installations explored themes of identity, sexuality, and power in Chile. His provocative work challenged social and political norms, often employing his own body as a site of artistic exploration.
Hamish Fulton
Canterbury, United Kingdom
Fulton's walking art explores the relationship between landscape, experience, and representation. His photographic and textual works document his solitary journeys, inviting viewers to contemplate the act of walking as a form of artistic expression.
Claudio Perna
Caracas, Venezuela
Perna's photographs and experimental films explored the landscape and culture of Venezuela. His work, often infused with a sense of poetic observation, captured the beauty and complexity of his country.
Bleda y Rosa
Lleida, Spain
Bleda y Rosa's photographic series explore the relationship between landscape, memory, and history. Their work, often characterized by a sense of stillness and detachment, captures the traces of human presence in the environment.
Ana Teresa Ortega
San Sebastián, Spain
Ortega's photographic and installation work explores the relationship between memory, history, and representation. Her work often addresses themes of political violence and social injustice.
Alberto Baraya
Bogotá, Colombia
Baraya's work dissects scientific classification, blurring the lines between art and botany. His 'Herbarium' series satirizes colonial practices, revealing the artifice in nature's representation.
Joan Fontcuberta
Barcelona, Spain
Fontcuberta challenges photographic truth, crafting elaborate hoaxes that expose the medium's inherent subjectivity. His work blurs the lines between reality and fiction, questioning the nature of perception.