Photo Essay
Series
A series that foregrounds the work of both emerging and established photographers whose images examine the social, cultural, and political landscape in Pittsburgh and beyond.
Photo: Pete Marovich
A series that foregrounds the work of both emerging and established photographers whose images examine the social, cultural, and political landscape in Pittsburgh and beyond.
The imaginative potential of photography offers Aleem Hurst opportunities to create the world they want to live in.
After the sudden passing of Rebecca Arthur’s mother in the summer of 2014, still grieving, she left her childhood home of Fayetteville, New York, to begin school in New York City.
Photographer Mark Clowney reflects on the legacy left by his father, and the connections between the photography of father and son.
In her series Indoor Voices, photographer Hannah Altman documents her evolving relationship with her mother.
Through a series of evocative portraits, photographer Njaimeh Njie explores black womanhood in Pittsburgh.
With his Nearsighted series, photographer Tom Souzer gets up close and personal with the people of Downtown Pittsburgh.
At one time, Aliquippa was home to the world's largest steel mill. When the mill closed in 1984, however, it left the town with no clear path forward.
In a series of striking and idiosyncratic portraits, Jack D. Teemer, Jr. offers an unvarnished look at life in the American Rust Belt of the 1980s.
Lance Scott Walker and Peter Beste offer an unparalleled portrait of the neighborhoods and clubs where Houston's renowned rap scene was born.
Photojournalist Stephanie Strasburg explores present-day realities in the mill towns that dot the Monongahela and Allegheny River Valleys.