Diane Arbus : Sanctum Sanctorum review – a grotesquely bleak but brutally truthful vision of (…)
David Zwirner Gallery, London From cruel pictures of elderly widows to a shocking image of motherhood, the American photographer’s genius is on full display in a show that finds ugliness all around her In 1971, at the age of 48, the American photographer Diane Arbus killed herself. Someone (…)
Site référencé:
The Guardian (Africa)
2641.png?width=140&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=288cc5be2859f63e4c2a0e39ab4a7cf0, 2641.png?width=460&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=bb99a72382a24d3f8cfb14086a3b9999, 2641.png?width=700&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=226e90f3b8ff024df3520e4079d9a452
The Guardian (Africa)
‘The fear is real’ : how Midlands attacks have changed Sikh women’s daily lives
8/11/2025
Everybody panic – the workplace has become too ‘feminized’ ! | Arwa Mahdawi
8/11/2025
Lula’s balancing act : Cop30 Amazon summit juggles climate and social priorities
8/11/2025
Businesses worldwide brace for extra Trump tariffs on steel imports
8/11/2025
‘For the women who gave birth in the dark’ : a portrait of motherhood in Gaza
8/11/2025
UK to announce plans to emulate stringent Danish immigration system
8/11/2025