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Magnum photographer Constantine Manos passed away after a long battle with Alzheimer’s on January 2, 2025. He was 90 years old.

Constantine “Costa” Manos began his photographic career when he was just 13, joining the school camera club in 1947 — incidentally, the same year Magnum Photos was founded. Within a few years, he was a professional photographer working at his local newspaper, and well on his way to becoming one of the most influential documentary photographers of his generation. 

Born in 1934, in Columbia, South Carolina, USA, to Greek immigrant parents, Manos developed his love for photography in his early teens, but it wasn’t until he was 18 that he garnered a more substantial understanding and appreciation for the greater world of photography. 

In 1952, he enrolled at the University of South Carolina. While there, he read an article in a magazine about the photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson, who, unbeknown to him, would become Manos’s mentor from afar. The young photographer went so far as to acquire the same equipment — a Leica rangefinder and Ilford film. That same year, Cartier-Bresson published Images à la Sauvette, or The Decisive Moment. Around the same time, Manos made his first serious photographs and “began a lifelong search for beautiful and poetic images.” 

Manos was led by a concern for the social conditions of people in the American South. He had heard about an island off the coast of South Carolina, between Hilton Head and Savannah, Georgia, that sounded like the right subject matter for the kinds of pictures he wanted to take. Daufuskie Island, was and still is, the home of members of the Gullah Geechee, an African American community whose relative isolation allowed them to preserve some of the culture and language of their enslaved West African ancestors. While a student at his then-segregated university, Manos wrote and published anti-segregation editorials featuring several of these images.
His parents, Dimitri and Aphrodite (Vaporiotou) Manos, were from Avşa Island in the Sea of Marmara in Turkey. After the end of WWI, they were forced to Greece during the 1922-23 population exchange. They then emigrated to Columbia, SC, and eventually ran the Washington Street Cafe, which served only to a Black clientele during segregation. Dimitri was known as “Big Jim” and cooked what is known today as “soul food.” 

Together, they encouraged Manos and his siblings to pursue their creative hobbies, from learning instruments to allowing Manos to use the basement of their house as a darkroom. Manos played the flute and his sister and brother played violin and piano. Becoming a lover of classical music, he was hired as the official photographer of the Boston Symphony Orchestra at its summer festival in Tanglewood when he was 19. His book, Portrait of a Symphony, about the orchestra, was published eight years later in 1961.

After graduating with a BA in English Literature in 1955, Manos became a Private in the U.S. Army, serving his draft time in Germany as a staff photographer with the Stars & Stripes for two years. Aside from his assignments for the newspaper, Manos found time to make pictures for himself during weekend leaves and longer furlough time. Over the course of a year he shot approximately 60 rolls of film, which were processed and put away. In 2010, Manos pulled the forgotten rolls of film from his files, made contact sheets, and edited the work for the first time. After military service, he moved to New York, where he worked for Esquire, Life and Look. A portrait of a grieving woman at the funeral for a Black soldier killed in Vietnam was one of his most emblematic images, published in Look magazine in 1966. 
His parents were Greek refugees, and after hearing stories about life in his father’s home village, Manos obtained a grant to pursue a documentary project in his familial home. From 1961 to 1963 he lived in Greece, where he made the photographs for his book A Greek Portfolio, inspired over the three years by the people he encountered there. A Greek Portfolio was first published in 1972. The book won awards at Arles and at the Leipzig Book Fair, and exhibitions of the work took place at the Bibliothèque Nationale de France and the Art Institute of Chicago. It was in 1963, during his time in Greece, that his attempt to join Magnum Photos was finally successful. He became a full member two years later.
Composing his photographs with patience and serenity, Manos always sought to capture the magic of life as it is lived. “I am a people photographer and have always been interested in people,” he said. The Bostonians, his document of the diversity and dynamism of life in the city, was one such project, preoccupied with people. “Going out into the city with a small camera and making hundreds of pictures of people doing hundreds of things is a dizzying odyssey,” he said. “It’s like gathering the bits of an intimate mosaic.” In Boston, where he settled following his Greek travels, assignments for Time-Life books and the 1974 multimedia project Where’s Boston? fed initially into his larger survey of Bostonian people.
Manos was interested in capturing freedom and joy in celebratory moments. His first self-led project after joining Magnum was a survey of color in the United States, ranging from the leisure habits of California’s beach dwellers, to beer-drinking bikers at Daytona Beach, to Mardi Gras and Gay Pride festivals. Though he was from South Carolina, Manos reflected that his life-long fascination with “the Americans” in this project arose from an outsider’s perspective, having been brought up in a Greek family. Images from the work first appeared in his book American Color, published in 1995, and later in American Color 2, published in 2010. Lyricism defines all of his work: “I hope I can create a book of photographic poems, each unique yet all connected,” he said.
The first gay Magnum photographer, Manos closely documented the March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay, and Bi Equal Rights and Liberation in 1993, as well as the 25th Anniversary of Stonewall in 1994. On May 17, 2004, Manos photographed the very first legal same-sex marriages in the US in the small Massachusetts town of Provincetown, a long-time favorite gathering place of artists and LGBTQ+ people.
Since 2008, Manos had lived in Provincetown with his husband and partner of 61 years, Michael Prodanou, a Greek /Canadian architect and painter. Their relationship began in Rome on May 16, 1963 — the same year that Manos joined Magnum. At the time, Prodanou lived across the street from the Pantheon on Via della Minerva and the pair met in a fish restaurant called “Mare Nostrum” around the corner. They married on December 11, 2011 in their Provincetown home.
In the last few years, Manos stopped making new photographs and teaching workshops, but a large body of work remains in his studio. Hundreds of images from the American Color series, all printed by Manos himself, remain unseen. 
Manos is survived by his husband, Michael Prodanou; his sister, Irene Constantinides of Atlanta, GA; his brother, Theofanis Manos of Greenville, SC; as well as three nephews and a niece.
Manos’s photographs are in the permanent collections of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; New York; Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; the Library of Congress, Washington, DC; the Art Institute of Chicago; the Bibliothèque Nationale de France; George Eastman House, Rochester, NY; the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; the Benaki Museum, Athens; and the Provincetown Art Association and Museum, which presented a retrospective exhibition of his work in 2013. In 2003, Manos was awarded the Leica Medal of Excellence for his pictures from American Color.
 In 2022, in a reception in Washington, DC, the Greek Prime Minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, on behalf of the Hellenic Republic of Greece, awarded Manos the Knight of the Order of the Phoenix. This honor is bestowed to Greeks who have excelled and who have helped raise Greece’s international prestige. Of the 10 people awarded this honor, Manos was the only one in the arts and letters.
“It is with deep sadness that I reflect on the passing of Costa Manos, an extraordinary photographer and a cherished member of Magnum Photos,” writes Magnum President Cristina de Middel. “Costa belonged to an earlier generation of Magnum, yet his work continues to inspire many of us who never had the chance to meet him personally. His ability to capture the poetry of everyday life with unmatched sensitivity and a keen eye for light and color has left an indelible mark on the history of photography.”
“As president of Magnum, I feel we have lost not just a remarkable artist but also a fundamental part of what makes our collective unique. Costa’s unwavering dedication to photography and to Magnum’s mission will remain an enduring example for us all. My heartfelt condolences go out to his friends and family. His legacy will live on in his images and in the inspiration he has provided to so many.”

Archive 

Constantine Manos: 1934 - 2025 

On assignment for The New Yorker, Moises Saman documented the trail of Captagon-smuggling from Syria to Jordan.

Distro 

Captagon Smuggling 

Former US President and humanitarian Jimmy Carter has died at the age of 100.

Archive 

Jimmy Carter: 1924 - 2024 

With the year coming to a close we look back at photographers' work from 2024. 
Even though their projects -  both commissioned and personal - were varied in topic and location, many focused on some of the year's major crises: the ongoing conflict in Gaza and Lebanon, the war in Ukraine, and the US presidential election.

Distro 

End of Year: 2024 

December 31, 2024 marks 25 years since Vladimir Putin became leader of Russia. 
Having first served in the USSR and then Russian Federation as an intelligence officer, Putin served as President from 1999 to 2008, then retained control of the country while assuming the office of Prime Minister from 2008 to 2012, when he was again reelected President. Through successive changes in term-limits, Putin has retained the Presidency ever since and with his reelection in 2024, and changes to the constitution that he had influenced in 2021, he could potentially retain his office until 2036.   
As of December, 2024, only Joseph Stalin has served longer as leader of Russia or the Soviet Union.

Archive 

25 Years of Putin's Primacy 

Biography 

Thomas Dworzak 

Sabiha Çimen has been photographically documenting the USA since 2019, capturing images of the country and its people through the lens of a Turkish immigrant.

Distro 

Viewing the United States - Ongoing... 

Antimicrobial resistance is likely to kill 8.22 million people a year by 2050, according to a study published in The Lancet in September 2024, making it a major health concern, especially in war zones. The health realities of conflict are often not seen in their full complexity. War means that victims are wounded with weapons full of microbes, and those who survive often scar in unclean areas, making the spread of infection more likely. 

"As wealthier countries bomb poorer ones, devastating essential infrastructure, they have created the tragic social conditions that foster antibiotic resistance. The public-health fallout knows no borders and can carry on indefinitely, even after the bombs stop," writes Francesca Mari for the NYT Magazine. 

Enri Canaj traveled to Beirut and Baghdad to report on antimicrobial resistance and research in the two cities' major hospitals. He followed Omar Dewachi, a medical anthropologist who studies antibiotic resistance and war, in his quest to understand the mechanism and significance of this health phenomenon. With a first stop at the American University of Beirut Hospital, at the time starting to be a place of refuge for Palestinian refugees fleeing Gaza, they met with Antoine Abou Fayad, a researcher in conflict medicine since 2017. Adam Afana, a 5-year-old Gazan boy being treated in Beirut, was one of the first to arrive in the capital. An infection in his severely wounded left arm required intravenous antibiotics. Writer and photographer then travel with Dewachi to Baghdad, the researcher's hometown, where microbial resistance is also a growing concern in a healthcare industry still reeling from the ravages of Saddam Hussein's reign.

Distro 

Antimicrobial Resistance in Wartime... 

On assignment for Die Zeit, Myriam Boulos shares images from Syria following the fall of President Bashar al-Assad’s government on December 8, which marked the end of more than five decades of the brutal al-Assad regime.

On assignment for Libération, Emin Ozmen has been documenting the aftermath of the fall of the Assad regime in Damascus since 13 December, capturing the celebrations in Ummayad Square and the people's search for the fate of their detained relatives after thousands of prisoners were released.

Distro 

Syria, December 2024 

In just over a week, rebel forces ended the Assad family's decades-long rule, halting thirteen years of war that claimed nearly half a million lives and displaced half the population. Over the years, millions have fled to Jordan, Turkey, Iraq, Lebanon, and Europe. 

From the start, Magnum photographers documented the war’s brutal realities: the migrant crisis, foreign interventions, atrocities committed by regime forces, and, above all, the unyielding struggle of Syrians for survival.

Archive 

Syria: The Fall of Assad's Regime... 

(From Art Flow, 2024:)
Since the publication of his long-term photographic observation of the people who live on the Mississippi ("Sleeping by the Mississippi", 2004), Alec Soth has been Invited to work in the Limmattal as part of ART FLOW and for this project has made the specific energy of the Emma Kunz Center in Würenlos the starting point of a photographic journey of discovery. He was impressed by the power of the place and the fascination of the visitors, some of whom come from far away to engage with the Emma Kunz Grotto. On the basis of this focus, the artist worked in the Limmattal in spring 2024 .

He visited people who deal professionally with the topic of energy and healing - fortune tellers, forest bathers, shamans, herbal healers, hypnotists, mediums, etc. He got involved in their working realities, exposed himself to the specific practices and portrayed the people in their extraordinary world. This resulted in a diary, the "Limmat Valley Diary". The photographic diary, supplemented with the artist's handwritten thoughts and impressions, allows a special view of the Limmat Valley, shows us a scene, indeed a culture, that often operates in secret. "Limmat Valley Diary" documents a photographic journey that explores the relationships between landscape and people and addresses the energy contained therein. Soth says: "This work is about the restorative power of tactile encounters with place".

The exhibition is a cooperation between ART FLOW and the Emma Kunz Center.

Distro 

Limmat Valley Diary 

Patrick Zachmann has been documenting the reconstruction of Notre Dame's Cathedral for the last five years.
Find here a selection of the last chapter of the reconstruction of Notre Dame Cathedral, capturing the meticulous efforts to finalize the restoration of this iconic Parisian monument, until its first religious mass.

Distro 

Rebirth of Notre Dame de Paris.... 

"'Murmurings of the Skin' is an exploration of the human connection to the body, the intersection of bodies and technology and the human need for physical contact. Over nearly eight years, Olivia Arthur has been making work that looks at people’s relationship with their bodies, what it means to feel comfortable in one’s own skin, and the importance of touch and intimacy. This work has included a series about young people, physicality and sexuality, stability and robotics, about touch, gestures, and solitude in COVID times. The work was triggered by her own pregnancy and the birth of her two children, images of whom appear throughout the series."


Publisher : VOID
November 2024
22,5 x 28 cm
160 pages
Softcover with dustjacket

Book 

Murmurings of the skin 

"During his six-year journey across the United States creating the project that became American Geography, Matt Black collected objects in the locations he visited. Each location is designated as an area of “concentrated poverty”—a US Census definition for places with poverty rates of 20% or higher. Over time, the objects he found and collected began to take on symbolic significance.

As Black crisscrossed the United States, his collection grew into the thousands: plastic spoons and forks, lottery tickets, liquor bottles, lighters, and matchbooks. Some items were important, like job applications, medical paperwork, driver’s licenses; some were lost personal effects, like family photographs, bracelets, eyeglasses, notes, and letters. And there was the detritus of labor: work gloves, broken tools and supplies, wire, bolts, padlocks, and bent nails.

This new monograph, presented as a companion volume to Black’s seminal photobook, American Geography, presents photographs of these objects, assemblages, and collages, as well as previously unpublished images from American Geography, and the voices of those who are cut off from the “American Dream.”

These humble, discarded objects form a portrait of America assembled from its roadways and sidewalks, an archaeology of dispossession."


Thames & Hudson
IBSN: 0500027757
Release date: November 19th, 2024

Book 

American Artifacts 

Magnum photographers are on the ground, documenting the 2024 United States Presidential Election as it unfolds. This coverage is ongoing and will be updated as new content becomes available.

Distro 

The 2024 United States Presidential... 

Magnum America is not a comprehensive photographic history of the United States, but rather draws on stories from the Magnum Archives to ask: What is ‘America’?

Arranged into decade-by-decade chapters spanning from the 1940s to the present day – complete with timelines, story-led individual portfolios and collective portfolios – Magnum America places ordinary and extraordinary people and events side by side, offering a moving interpretation of the nation’s past and present, whilst calling into question its future.

This expansive publication features over 600 illustrations from photographers including Bruce Davidson, Wayne Miller, Eve Arnold, Martin Parr, Alessandra Sanguinetti, Bieke Depoorter, Paul Fusco, Susan Meiselas, Sabiha Çimen and Leonard Freed. Edited by Magnum photographer Peter van Agtmael and Professor Laura Wexler, who also contributes an introductory essay, Magnum America is complemented by a computational analysis and data visualization by Lauren Tilton and Taylor Arnold that works to unpack the myth and mystery of the United States of America.

Breathtaking in scope and abundant with the photographic riches and intelligent, insightful authorship for which Magnum’s photographers are renowned, Magnum America is a vital contribution to the documentation of contemporary American history and a landmark photobook.

Magnum America
The United States
Published by Thames & Hudson
Edited by Laura Wexler and Peter van Agtmael
With an introductory essay by Laura Wexler
With a computational analysis and data visualization by Lauren Tilton and Taylor Arnold

Book 

Magnum America: The United States... 

Azerbaijan will host COP-29 from November 11 to 22, 2024. But the small oil state is suffering greatly from the causes and effects of climate change, and faces significant trade-offs.  

On assignment for the NYT, Nanna Heitmann documented the small country in July 2024. Together with journalist Max Bearak, she reported from remote mountain villages, an offshore oil platform and the capital, Baku.

"As alarm over global warming soars amid record-breaking heat and increasingly erratic weather, Azerbaijan has barely begun the process of replacing oil and gas. It has argued, as many less developed nations have, that rich nations must cough up billions of dollars to help them transition their economies, given that the world’s wealthier countries are responsible, in historical terms, for the majority of greenhouse gas emissions," wrote Max Bearak for the NYT.

Distro 

Azerbaijan's Climate Change Dilemmas... 

The military clashes between Israel and various Lebanon-based militant groups trace back to Israel's founding in 1948, after which Lebanon and its neighbors declared war. Following the PLO's establishment in Lebanon in 1968, Israel invaded twice—in 1978 (Operation Litani) and in 1982—occupying southern Lebanon. In response, Hezbollah was formed to resist the occupation.

Israel withdrew in 2000, but conflict reignited in a month-long war with Hezbollah in 2006, which left significant damage in Lebanon but strengthened Hezbollah's political position. Since then, border skirmishes have continued, escalating further since the outbreak of the Israeli-Palestinian war in October 2023. 

Magnum photographers have documented this enduring conflict for decades.

Archive 

Israel & Lebanon from the Archives... 

On Saturday, October 7th, Israel was taken by surprise in an unexpected and severe cross-border assault by Hamas from Gaza, resulting in the initial deaths of 900 people. The BBC reported that  included in this number were 260 individuals attending a music festival. With many still missing or abducted by Hamas in Israel, families are left desperately seeking information as the conflict unfolds.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has declared war on Hamas, vowing to use “enormous force” by launching strikes in Gaza and imposing a “complete siege” on the Gaza Strip, freezing the flow of essential supplies. According to the BBC, as of October 9th approximately 690 people in Gaza had lost their lives and more than 120,000 had been displaced from their homes.

The result of this has triggered the latest outbreak of fighting in the decades-long Israeli-Palestinian conflict, drawing in outside powers and echoing across the broader Arab region.

Distro 

Israel and Palestine from the Archives... 

Ukrainian President Vicktor Yanukovych’s cabinet abandoned an agreement on closer trade ties in the EU, favoring closer cooperation with Russia. What began as small protests escalated to the Revolution of Dignity, also known as the Maidan Revolution, a violent protest with at least 88 deaths. Following the Euromaidan protests and removal of Yanukovych, partnered with pro-Russia unrest in Ukraine, Russian annexed the Ukrainian territory of Crimea.

Demonstrations in the Donbas area of Ukraine escalated into a war between the Ukrainian Government and Russian-backed separatist forces. Russian military vehicles crossed the border in several locations of Donetsk Oblast, which is believed to be responsible for the defeat of Ukrainian forces in early September of 2014. In November, Ukrainian military reported intensive movement of Russian combat troops into separatist-controlled parts of eastern Ukraine.

In October 2021, Russia reignited concerns of a potential invasion after moving troops and military equipment to the shared border with Ukraine. The buildup continued until Russia launched a full-scale invasion in February, 2022.

Distro 

Russo-Ukrainian Conflict