Hotshoe Magazine Issue 210 (Todd Hido) is available on loremnotipsum.com. Issue 210 is dedicated to the work of Todd Hido, well known for his atmospheric nighttime photographs of suburban America that tap into our collective memory, and communicate human experience.
Hotshoe Magazine Issue 209 (An Emotional Landscape) has arrived. Whether we live in a city or rural ideal our interdependence with nature is ever-present. In this issue, we explore our role in nature and our relationship with the creatures who share our world.
Hotshoe Magazine Issue 208 (Martin Parr) is here. Martin Parr, one of the most important figures in British photography, is well known for documenting the English social classes. A prominent member of Magnum Photos since 1994, he changed how we see British society and documentary photography with his use of colour rather than black-and-white.
Hotshoe Magazine Issue 207 (A West African Portrait) is available on loremnotipsum.com. In this issue, we focus on photographic talent from West Africa. With the help of Autograph, London and David Hill Gallery we bring together the work of ten influential photographers, including interviews with Leonce Raphael Agbodjelou, Rachidi Bissiriou and Sanlé Sory.
Hotshoe Magazine Issue 206 (Chris Killip) is here and features Chris Killip, one of Britain's greatest documentary photographers, who died last October at the age of 74. Throughout a career spanning more than 30 years, he made some of the most striking images of life in the British Isles as a response to the social situations resulting from deindustrialisation, and in the process created what Martin Parr referred to as "a different way of looking".
Hotshoe Magazine Issue 205 (At Home) is available on loremnotipsum.com. Photograph what you know. This has long been good advice, but it has never been more relevant than in 2020. COVID-19 has had an enormous impact, not only on how we work and travel, but also on how we think and feel. This issue features photographers that have been inspired by their families, the confines of their interior spaces, places they call home, and their own back gardens.