The photographers who turned sidewalks into galleries. Unposed, unfiltered, unforgettable — they hunted moments that existed for a fraction of a second and made them last forever.
Winogrand, Maier, Bresson
The most influential concept in the history of photography came from one photographer and one book. This episode examines what Cartier-Bresson actually meant by "the decisive moment" — and why most people misunderstand it.
Winogrand left 300,000 unedited negatives when he died. He never stopped shooting. This episode is about what happens when photographic drive becomes pathology — and why the results are still magnificent.
She worked as a nanny. She photographed secretly for forty years. She never showed anyone her work. John Maloof found 100,000 negatives in a storage locker in 2007 and the art world had to rewrite its history of photography.