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Chicago-based artist Kelly Kristin Jones addresses the role of white supremacy in society in her exhibition "nwl," short for "nice white ladies."
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St. Louis photographer Jess T. Dugan is acclaimed for their photographs of trans and gender-nonconforming older adults. The new book “Look at me like you love me” showcases their work.
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The contest received 202 student entries from 48 schools across the St. Louis and Rolla regions.
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Thousands of fans turned out to celebrate the return of St. Louis Cardinals baseball without pandemic restrictions for the first time in two years.
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The Humans of St. Louis book contains highlights from the digital project. The book comes out this July, with preorders open until March 1.
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Photographer Tiffany J. Sutton challenges the one-dimensional perception of Black women through her award-winning portraits.
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A security guard ordered a local teacher to stop photographing a MetroLink station. Is that legal? Washington University’s Lisa Hoppenjans discusses photography and your rights in this digital age.
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Pete Souza documented all eight years of President Obama’s presidency as the official White House photographer. He later used those photos to criticize the Trump administration.
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Photo Flood St. Louis formed nine years ago, aiming to organize photographers to flood each of the 79 St. Louis neighborhoods and “record it in a surge of imagery.” Founder Jason Gray discusses how the group grew to 610 members and what they learned while flooding the city.
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Starting July 1, photographers will pay $100 a year, and videographers $500 a day, to use the areas for things like movie or documentary shoots, or wedding and engagement photos.