
Porn sets, wild dogs and knitting: 30 years of Yancey Richardson gallery
Carolyn Drake's practice challenges traditional boundaries between author and subject, and blends photography with embroidery, collage and sculpture. This image comes from Knit Club, a project with a group of women in Mississippi that explores identity and community. The series was shortlisted for the Paris Photo Aperture and Lucie Photo Book awards. See more here Photograph: Carolyn Drake
Zanele Muholi is a visual activist and photographer who documents and celebrates the lives of Black LGBTQ+ communities in South Africa. Since 2006, Muholi has been engaged in Faces and Phases, a project portraying Black lesbian and transgender individuals with dignity and resilience. Their mission is to rewrite South Africa's queer visual history, affirming presence and resistance amid widespread hate. See more here Photograph: Zanele Muholi
Jared Bark is best known for his performances in photo booths between 1969 and 1976. He initially used public booths, but ultimately acquired a secondhand one of his own, complicating the notion of a photo booth as a site of both public and private performance Photograph: Jared Bark
Larry Sultan grew up in California's San Fernando Valley, which was a source of inspiration for a number of his projects. His series The Valley (2004) addresses the use of ordinary homes as sets for pornographic films, and asks why the ideal of middle-class domesticity lends itself to this most curious form of cultural appropriation Photograph: Larry Sultan
Lynn Saville photographs cities between twilight and dawn, capturing transitional, often deserted urban spaces. Her images focus on fundamental city elements – bridges, billboards, walls – existing independently of urban life. In her New York night photographs, the city appears suspended in time, revealing the shift from day to night and the transformation of industrial areas into residential neighbourhoods Photograph: Lynn Saville
Spanning more than 40 years, John Divola's work has consistently questioned the limits of photography. His series Dogs Chasing My Car in the Desert (1996–98) comprises portraits of dogs that he photographed in motion with a motorised 35mm camera. The grainy black-and-white images evoke the spirit of Eadweard Muybridge's stop-motion studies, and explore the herding relationship between man and animal with a slightly comic approach Photograph: John Divola
Matt Lipps creates complex photographic works by physically assembling cutout images from magazines and books into three-dimensional tableaux, which he then re-photographs and enlarges. In the 2019 series Where Figure Becomes Ground, he overlays iconic 1990s fashion images of supermodels such as Kate Moss and Cindy Crawford on to archival documentary photos from US Camera Annual (1938–69). The silhouettes of these figures serve as windows revealing historical moments from the second world war, and highlight photography's constructed nature and shared visual language across disparate genres Photograph: Matt Lipps
David Hilliard's large-scale, multi-panelled photographs transform intimate, personal moments into richly layered narratives that explore masculinity, aging, sexuality and spirituality. Andreu (Bathroom Mirror) captures a quiet moment of vulnerability and contemplation, using multiple perspectives to blur the lines between autobiography and fiction. His work balances formal storytelling with deeply personal insight, elevating the everyday to something both familiar and elusive Photograph: David Hilliard
Tania Franco Klein creates staged, cinematic photographs that explore the psychological tensions of life in the digital age. In her series Positive Disintegration (2016–2019), she uses self-portraits to depict the emotional toll of relentless productivity and self-optimisation, inspired by Byung-Chul Han's The Burnout Society. Her work offers a surreal collage of experiences reflecting the fragmented nature of contemporary life. She lives and works in Mexico City. You can see more here and here Photograph: Tania Franco Klein/ courtesy Yancey Richardson
Terry Evans is celebrated for her evocative photographs of the American Midwest's landscapes and people. Growing up on the prairie instilled in her a deep connection to the Great Plains, which she has documented since the 1970s. Her work challenges common perceptions of the prairie, revealing its rich ecological diversity and complex cultural history. Her Inhabited Prairie series (1990–94) features black-and-white aerial images showing how farming, industry and military activity have transformed the Kansas landscape Photograph: Terry Evans
Mark Steinmetz is known for his intimate black-and-white images of youth and suburban life in the American south. Since the mid-1980s, he has used chance encounters to create portraits of solitary figures and everyday scenes that feel quietly introspective. Steinmetz's work reveals the subtle complexities of growing up and the shifting landscapes of small-town America. You can see more here Photograph: Mark Steinmetz
Italian artist Olivo Barbieri is known for disorienting aerial photographs that blur the line between reality and representation. In Alps - Geographies and People, he uses a technique he calls 'solid colour' to partially erase the mountain landscape, drawing attention to its elemental form. Shot from a helicopter, the image captures climbers mid traverse, transforming the Alps into both stage and hallucination Photograph: Olivo Barbieri
After she shifted from photographing people to still lifes, Laura Letinsky's carefully crafted scenes often focus on remnants of meals. In her 2013 series Albeit, she uses flatbed scanners and magazine cutouts to dissolve hierarchies of high and low imagery, embracing the scanner's restrictions to explore form. The layered compositions featuring fruit, cakes, goblets and cutlery suggest meals consumed, while reflecting on how photographs instruct how we build our lives Photograph: Laura Letinsky
Ori Gersht explores the tension between beauty and violence. In Becoming, postcards of still-life paintings from the Rijksmuseum, the Getty and the Met are printed on glass and then shattered, capturing the instant of collapse. The resulting image visualises a return to disorder and the fragility of collective memory Photograph: Ori Gersht
Sharon Core creates meticulously crafted photographs that blur the line between reality and illusion. By recreating historic still lifes and iconic artworks – often growing her own fruits and flowers or sourcing antique objects – Core explores authenticity, artifice and photography's relationship to painting. Her series Early American (2007–10) reimagines 19th-century still lifes inspired by Raphaelle Peale, using carefully cultivated produce and period glassware to evoke a time before photography
Photograph: Sharon Core/ courtesy Yancey Richardson
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