The Hollywood Reporter Tuesday March 10, 2026
Photography and film interact and converge in The Hidden Face of the Earth (Le Face cachée de la Terre), a feature documentary from director Arnaud Alain that premiered at the Berlin Film Festival. The film focuses on a photographer losing his eyesight. “Dimitri loves to photograph the people around him,” reads the film’s synopsis. “He knows that, one day, he will no longer see. He is unable to take photos as he used to. So, night and day, hidden behind his camera, he gathers light and bodies.” See the trailer at The Hollywood Reporter. Read the full Story >>
THE ART NEWSPAPER Tuesday March 10, 2026
The Vancouver Art Gallery (VAG) will now have one of the largest museum collections of photographer Stephen Shore’s work in the world, following a gift of more than 800 pieces from Vancouver’s Chan family. The family, whose wealth derives from real estate and clothing, also gave C$40 million (US$30 million) to the VAG in 2019 toward a new building. (That building, notes The Art Newspaper, was scrapped in 2024 due to soaring costs.) Selections from the gift works will go on view on March 27 in the gallery’s permanent collection galleries. Read the full Story >>
PetaPixel Tuesday March 10, 2026
The wedding photography industry has been hit with a number of scandals recently. Now PetaPixel looks at Yours Truly Media, owned by Paul and Amy Bolton of Texas, which has filed for bankruptcy, leaving photographers, videographers, and clients in the lurch to the tune of $2.3 million. Yours Truly Media, which still has a website but not an Instagram page, works (or worked) by having brides-and-grooms-to-be hire them for photography and videography services; the company would then contract photographers and videographers in that local area to shoot the event, explains PP. Read the full Story >>
By
David Schonauer Tuesday March 10, 2026
Traditional camera lenses can focus on one depth plane at a time, and everything in front of or behind that plane gets blurred. It's a fundamental limitation that photographers have learned to work
with. Now, however, researchers at Carnegie Mellon University's College of Engineering have demonstrated a camera system that can selectively focus on objects at different distances, creating images
in which everything is … Read the full Story >>