DATE

SHARE

Twitter
LinkedIn
Facebook
Email

For an art form inherently tied to time, it’s a misconception that photography progresses in forward motion. Art never follows a straight path, and photography’s true growth is mapped in patterns of revolution and expansion. As legendary MoMA curator and artist John Szarkowski once observed, “Its movement has not been linear and consecutive, but centrifugal. Photography, and our understanding of it, has spread from a center.”

Think of the medium instead in cosmological terms: looking back in time as it expands, circles back, reflects, moves on. This was the guiding principle behind the admittedly daunting undertaking of choosing the talented young photographers you’ll encounter in these pages. All under the age of 35, they represent a microcosm of a vast and remarkable generation of image makers. They are not part of a shared movement or aesthetic, nor is their work a direct mirror of their brilliant and esteemed nominators: Dawoud Bey, Justine Kurland, Cass Bird, Elle Pérez, Lyle Ashton Harris, Tyler Mitchell, Farah Al Qasimi, Jack Pierson, and Ethan James Green.

Think of this new group as the next ring, moving outward, in an era when photography is perhaps more prized, more omnipresent, and more distrusted than ever before. Individually, their photographs are a means for reckoning with trauma, deepening and transforming the art of the portrait, relying on traditional practices to explore and experiment and take risks, among myriad other ends. Collectively, they have dedicated themselves to photography as an art form, one that still has the power to alter the way we see the world—and as you’ll see in their answers, as an integral part of their lives, as fundamental as breathing.

—Rebecca Bengal

Rosemary Haynes

26, New York

By Justine Kurland

Darby Routtenberg

29, New York

By Elle Pérez

Lindsay Perryman

27, New York

By Elle Pérez

Jan Anthonio Diaz

26, New York

By Ethan James Green

Ian Kline

30, New York

By Richard Mosse

Ryan Rusiecki

26, Kingston, New York

By Lyle Ashton Harris

Rosa Polin

29, New York

By Elle Pérez

We’d Like to Come Home With You Tonight…

We’re getting ready to launch our first ever CULTURED at Home issue, packed with one-of-a-kind interiors. Pre-order your copy now and be the first to have it land at your abode.

You’ve almost hit your limit.

You’re approaching your limit of complementary articles. For expanded access, become a digital subscriber for less than $2 a week.

You’re approaching your limit of complementary articles. For expanded access, become a digital subscriber for less than $2 a week.

Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here

You’re approaching your limit of complementary articles. For expanded access, become a digital subscriber for less than $2 a week.

GET ACCESS

Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here

Want more in your life?

For less than the price of a cocktail, you can help independent journalism thrive.

Pop-Up-1_c
Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here
Pop-Up-1_c

Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here

Want more in your life?

For less than the price of a cocktail, you can help independent journalism thrive.

Pop-Up-1_c
Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here
Pop-Up-1_c

Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here

You’ve almost hit your limit.

You’re approaching your limit of complementary articles. For expanded access, become a digital subscriber for less than $2 a week.

You’re approaching your limit of complementary articles. For expanded access, become a digital subscriber for less than $2 a week.
Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here
You’re approaching your limit of complementary articles. For expanded access, become a digital subscriber for less than $2 a week.

Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here

We Have So Much More to Tell You!

This is a Critics' Table subscriber exclusive.

Join the Critics’ Table to keep reading and support independent art criticism.

Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here

Want more in your life?

For less than the price of a cocktail, you can help independent journalism thrive.

Pop-Up-1_c

Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here

Pop-Up-1_c

Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here

We have so much more to tell you.

You’ve reached your limit.

Sign up for a digital subscription, starting at less than $2 a week.

Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here

Want a seat at the table? To continue reading this article, sign up today.

Support independent criticism for $10/month (or just $110/year).

Already a subscriber? Log in.