DIYPhotography Thursday April 2, 2026
Copyright protection does not die when you do, notes DIY Photography. “Under US copyright law, you own the copyright to every image the moment you press the shutter, and there are additional benefits if you register your work with the copyright office," notes writer Dunja Dudic, and the copyright extends for 70 years after your death, meaning your work could benefit your family for two generations if you plan for it. A will or trust is the foundation of everything else: It’s how you direct who gets what, and, Dudic adds, how you protect your images from being used in ways you’d never approve of. Read the full Story >>
British Journal of Photography Thursday April 2, 2026
Photographer Mimi Mollica’s new book Moon City suggests that the profit motive shapes both our cities and our conception of space, mostly without us noticing, notes the British Journal of Photography. Shot with a telescope and a mobile phone, Mollica’s images pick out a particular view of London, focusing on his local area and the nearby financial center. He shows an environment mostly devoid of nature, in which stark geometries divide and repeat; images of the moon also recur, suggesting dreams, tides, and the pull of a different way of seeing. Read the full Story >>
The Hollywood Reporter Thursday April 2, 2026
OpenAI’s recent announcement that it was shutting down its Sora AI video creation app—and losing a $1 billion investment from Disney—hit the film industry like a bombshell, notes The Hollywood Reporter. “The big video-generation tool that was supposed to turn Disney+ into a user-generated paradise — or a field of memeslop, depending on your point of view — is no longer. And maybe, with it, OpenAI’s Hollywood ambitions are gone, too,” notes the publication in a follow-up to the big news. Read the full Story >>
KUNSTMUSEUM DEN HAAG Thursday April 2, 2026
Dutch artists and photographers Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin mark a marvelous 40-year career and their shared life with “Can Love Be a Photograph,” an exhibition at the Kunstmuseum Den Haag in The Hague, Netherlands. "As pioneers of digital image-making, Inez & Vinoodh occupy a singular position at the intersection of fashion and art, continuously pushing the boundaries of photography as a medium,” notes the museum. “A picture is never real life. It’s always the choice,” the duo tells Wallpaper. Read the full Story >>