A new version of Richard Billingham’s pioneering family project raises the same old questions around access, class and sensation
Bookshelf
Considering an uncanny medium and how we understand it, the Hungarian’s new book blends the playfulness with a welcome loss of control
Mixing his signature celebrity portraits with images of his own family, Carter’s new book celebrates unparalleled beauty in everyone
Shot in arms fairs around the world over the last eight years, Nikita Teryoshin’s Nothing Personal reveals the chilling business of conflict
Gathering hundreds of images and contributors, a new book challenges the existing narratives on photographic history and collaboration
Set in a coastal Scottish village, Alicia Bruce’s new book follows a community determined to defend their homes and land
Our final books roundup of 2023 takes us from Belgium to Lahore to Berlin and beyond, with entries from Jason Koxvold, Keisha Scarville and Tami Aftab
His photographs of Birmingham’s late-1960s housing crisis transformed how the urban poor were visualised in the UK. We catch up with the veteran documentarian
Scottish photographer Margaret Mitchell reflects on returning to a project she started in 1994 – photographing her sister and her children in impoverished Stirling
Tish Murtha was a firm believer that photography could be a tool for social change – here, her daughter Ella reflects on the importance and continued relevance of her work