Between Here and There
© Rineke Dijkstra. Almerisa, Leiden, Netherlands, 1994. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of Ellen Kern, 2008. Between Here and There: Passages in Contemporary Photography is an exhibition that has...
View ArticleRineke Dijkstra: A Retrospective (8 Photos)
“Coney Island, N.Y., USA, June 20, 1993.” Chromogenic print, 117 x 94 cm. Courtesy the artist and Marian Goodman Gallery, New York and Paris. © Rineke Dijkstra Rineke Dijkstra: A Retrospective opens...
View ArticleEuropean Roots
Before photography, only the wealthy could afford to have a formal portrait painted. With the invention and mainstreaming of photography, portraits became more accessible to everyone, as did the style...
View ArticleRineke Dijkstra: Seeing is Believing
Ours is a divisive, celebrity-obsessed culture in which certain individuals are deified or prosecuted in the court of public opinion depending on the week, and we can all dream of being on reality TV....
View ArticleEnd Frame: Empathy, Not Sentiment, in Portraiture
This month the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art opens a mid-career retrospective of the work of Dutch portrait photographer Rineke Dijkstra, an exhibition that will also travel to the Guggenheim...
View ArticleRineke Dijkstra Wins $110,540 Hasselblad Award for 2017
Dutch portrait photographer Rineke Dijkstra has been named the 2017 Hasselblad Award Winner and will be awarded 1 million Swedish Krona (about $110,540 USD), the Hasselblad Foundation announced today....
View ArticleBetween Here and There
© Rineke Dijkstra. Almerisa, Leiden, Netherlands, 1994. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of Ellen Kern, 2008. Between Here and There: Passages in Contemporary Photography is an exhibition that has...
View ArticleRineke Dijkstra: A Retrospective (8 Photos)
“Coney Island, N.Y., USA, June 20, 1993.” Chromogenic print, 117 x 94 cm. Courtesy the artist and Marian Goodman Gallery, New York and Paris. © Rineke Dijkstra Rineke Dijkstra: A Retrospective opens...
View ArticleEuropean Roots
Before photography, only the wealthy could afford to have a formal portrait painted. With the invention and mainstreaming of photography, portraits became more accessible to everyone, as did the style...
View ArticleEuropean Roots
Before photography, only the wealthy could afford to have a formal portrait painted. With the invention and mainstreaming of photography, portraits became more accessible to everyone, as did the style...
View Article