Home Tags Miguel Groisman

Tag: Miguel Groisman

Miguel Groisman is a journalist graduated from Faculdade Cásper Líbero. Since his graduation, he has researched memory in photography, photojournalism and cinema.

In 2019, he published “Documenting HIV/AIDS: The construction of imagistic identities through World Press Photo award-winning photographs since the 1990s”, together with critic Simonetta Persichetti. Currently, Groisman is a reporter for arte!brasileiros, where he contributes to its digital platform as well as to the print edition of the magazine. Among the articles found in the volumes of arte!brasileiros, there are articles about filmmaker Steve McQueen, conflict photographer Peter van Agtmael, artist Emily Jacir, interviews with Gideon Mendel and Munemasa Takahashi – responsible for the “Tsunami, Photographs and Then” project. Other pieces published in this magazine include an investigation into the relationship between art and artificial intelligence and a reflection on how memes help to democratize the art world.

In 2021, Miguel Groisman also became a contributor to the magazine Aperture, specialized in photography.

Picture Diaries: Covid-19

During isolation, photographers show their daily lives through imagery records, and in Italy, Andrea Frazzeta profiles health workers on the front of the fight against Covid-19
Memory Records in Tsunami, Photographs and Then

The Memory of Last Things and After

The efforts, shown in the book Tsunami, Photographs and Then, to preserve memory through photography after the Sendai Earthquake

Penance according to Guy Veloso

After completing a 17-year project, a photographer from Belém gathers records of the faith of penitents across the country in a book made available online
Scene from the movie "You Weren't Here" by Ken Loach. Photo: Disclosure.

Where were we when we weren't here?

New feature by Englishman Ken Loach addresses the impacts of the uberization of the economy and society of tiredness on family relationships
The photo shows the sculpture "Cristo Mendigo" that was the opening car of the Ratos e Urubus parade. In the image, the sculpture is covered in garbage bags as a censure, and carries the banner that reads "Even forbidden, watch over us!"

Garbage, luxury and the plea for the forbidden

Centro Cultural São Paulo presents an exhibition on Ratos e Urubus, Larguem Minha Fantasia, an emblematic parade by the samba school Beija-Flor de Nilópolis, held in 1989 whose plot was written by Joãozinho Trinta.