Doctored images: Vice News removed a story and archival images of victims of Cambodia’s Killing Fields after the newly colorized photographs were shown to have been altered, with smiles placed on the faces of the tortured. Amid widespread outcry, Vice said it investigating the work of artist Matt Loughrey, who said he was trying to humanize some of the 14,000 people massacred at a Khmer Rouge prison, Reuters reports. “I feel like it's very coldblooded,” Killing Fields survivor Youk Chhang, executive director of the Documentation Center of Cambodia, told the Southeast Asia Globe. Photographer-filmmaker Laura Saunders notes: “The amount of disrespect for archival material & the atrocities they carry both in front of & behind the lens is something we have yet to truly reckon with.”
Women in photography: How to develop and grow a career in photography? That’s an overarching topic of the Annual Leica Woman Summit, being held virtually (and free) on April 22, 24, and 25. Speakers will include Janette Beckman, photography consultant and curator; Julie Grahame, photographer, journalist; and the founder of Black Women Photographers, Polly Irungu, the photography site Fstoppers reports. Sign up here.
But wait, there’s more: Also being held next week: a virtual photo networking, education, and inspiration event known as the Northern Short Course. Several Nat Geo portfolio reviewers will be at the National Press Photographers Association event, including Mallory Benedict, Dominique Hildebrand, Jill Foley, and Jen Tse. More info here.
Swimming with whales: In this dreamy Instagram video, Nat Geo Explorer Brian Skerry is seen working among orcas off the coast of Norway. Tune into Secrets of the Whales, a Disney+ original series from National Geographic that premieres Earth Day, April 22. (The Walt Disney Co. is the majority owner of National Geographic Partners.)
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