Vanity Fair Tuesday March 3, 2026
Christopher Anderson, whose recent photographs of Trump administration members drew gasps when they were published in Vanity Fair, now contributes some acute words to the magazine concerning the viral photograph of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor taken by Reuters photographer Phil Noble after the former Prince Andrew’s recent arrest. “The royal family has always understood the power of the frame. The portrait. The walkabout. The carefully calibrated grief. For generations, controlling the image was the same as controlling the story. And mostly, it worked,” Anderson notes, adding, “Except when it didn’t.” Read the full Story >>
Rolling Stone Tuesday March 3, 2026
Bob Weir was the most photogenic and photographed member of the Grateful Dead, often cited for his fashion choices and signature looks through the years. As part of its tribute coverage following Weir’s death on Jan. 10, Rolling Stone spoke with legendary photographers Jay Blakesberg, Danny Clinch, Bob Minkin, and Rosie McGee about what it was like to capture images of Weir over the past six decades. Blakesberg began taking pictures of the Grateful Dead in 1978, when he was 16, and shot Weir’s last concert in August 2025. Read the full Story >>
Museum of Modern Art Tuesday March 3, 2026
With the US approaching its 250th anniversary, the Museum of Modern Art in New York will feature a forum on April 22 called Visions of America to examine the powerful role images have played in shaping American identity. The event, part of MoMA’s Forums on Contemporary Art series, will bring together scholars (including Neferti X. M. Tadiar, Professor of Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Barnard College), musicians (Brandon López), artists (photographer Alejandro Cartagena), and others. Read the full Story >>
World Nature Photography Awards Tuesday March 3, 2026
Captain Ahab found his prey, to his own discomfort. Marine photographer Jono Allen also found a white humpback whale—a baby being nudged by its mother—and his image of the pair is the top winner of the 2026 World Nature Photography Awards. Allen’s image was taken in Vava’u, Tonga. Humpback whales migrate to Tonga’s warm waters to give birth, but a white whale is exceptionally rare, notes BBC Wildlife. The calf, who was named Mãhina by locals, was first filmed in 2024. Read the full Story >>