Please enter your email and website or LinkedIn to receive more information about our free and paid accounts.
Thanks! We'll reply to you shortly.
Please enter your email address below and we’ll send you instructions on how to change your password.
Enter your new password below or generate one. The password should be at least ten characters long. To make it stronger, use upper and lower case letters, numbers, and symbols.
While humanitarian photography may seem like a cross-section between documentary, editorial, and photojournalism, its history has a long tradition of photographers advocating for change.
Arik Shraga teams up with DAVAI Theater Group to capture and enhance an already magical show — one that complies with the very strict COVID-restrictions that have greatly affected the theater and performing arts communities.
Tina Boyadjieva took on a project with Lansinoh USA she would never forget — one that would require her to travel to five continents, explore 18 countries, meet 65 women, and be lauded by countless publications.
Freelancer Jon Morgan, whose sister is an educator at several non-profit dialysis clinics, gets imagery of the nurses who work there while asking about their fears at work.
Louisville, Kentucky-based Clay Cook continues his work with Waterboys, an athlete-run organization that builds wells in Africa for communities in need of clean drinking water, like the Maasai people in Tanzania.
Dallas-based Terri Glanger travels to Memphis to photograph young patients at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, which partners with the restaurant chain Chili’s every year to raise money for these kids.
New Orleans-based Bryan Tarnowski speaks with residents living in poverty and policy makers in Mississippi to discuss the growing push for Medicaid expansion in the region.
The wife and husband team of Jenn Ackerman and Tim Gruber head to northern Minnesota to learn about the Ojibwe people and their eternal connection to wild rice.
South Carolina-based photographer Sean Rayford recently returned from a crowdfunded trip documenting the Central American Caravan for ten days in Tijuana, Mexico.
Clay Cook was just returning from India when he received a call from the publisher of “The Voice of Louisville” that would have him turning around and heading to another adventure—this one in Havana, Cuba.