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10 Classic Photographs — Reinterpreted Entirely in Play-Doh

Added on by Hattie Crisell.

The artist Eleanor Macnair is an expert on the subject of Play-Doh. Different colors have different textures, she explains: “The whites are usually very soft; the black’s quite oily.” The children who play with the modeling clay probably haven’t noticed, but Play-Doh is Macnair’s palette: She uses it to recreate her favorite images from the world of documentary photography, then captures her versions on camera.

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The Photographer Who Captured People Driving in Los Angeles

Added on by Hattie Crisell.

“I wanted to do something that would have a little humor to it, and maybe a little riskiness,” the photographer Mike Mandel says. His new book, “People in Cars” out next month, does just that: It’s a collection of snapshots he took in 1970s California as a 19-year-old kid. “I grew up in Los Angeles and all of my experience of being in L.A. was about going from one place to the other by car,” he recalls.

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Old Photographs That Capture America at a Crossroads

Added on by Hattie Crisell.

"There’s an old French expression: The nearer the gallows, the clearer the truth,” says the documentary photographer Joel Sternfeld. “And my truth began with Walker Evans.” The iconic photographer of the Great Depression was a key inspiration on Sternfeld’s own influential 1987 photography book “American Prospects,” images from which go on display at London’s Beetles+Huxley gallery this week, alongside pictures that have never been shown before.

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A Collaboration Between Georgia O’Keeffe and Alfred Stieglitz, Captured Over 20 Years

Added on by Hattie Crisell.

O’Keeffe was the subject of a “multi-part portrait” taken by Stieglitz: more than 300 photographs that he took between 1917 and 1937, several of which are on display here. Her poses are confident and deliberate, her head always held high; the portraits seem to capture not only her distinctive style — dark layers of clothing and swept-back hair — but an undeniable strength.

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