Julie Hascoët was born in 1989 in Douarnenez. Her work considers photography in a larger context, as part of installations and through publishing. Her personal interests in photography revolve around the themes of dereliction and ruins, of metamorphosis, and the notions of ephemeral-ity and resistance. In her practice, photography is seen as a material conducive to re-composition and integrates into a work of installation, or editing.
© Portrait taken from the artist's FB profile
Miki Hasegawa is a Japanese photographer. After earning degrees in Environmental Scince and Design, and working as an architect, she transferred to being a professional photographer.
She self-published her first photobook "The Path of Million Pens" in 2014, then published "Internal Notebook" in 2017 as part of a RPS residency (Reminders Photography Stronghold) with Yumi Goto, Tokyo. This second book was published in a new larger edition by Ceiba in 2019.
© Portrait by Yumi Goto in the RPS library, Tokyo.
Born in 1989 into an artistic family in the Black Forest, Germany, Alma Haser is now based in London and on the southeast coast. She is known for her complex and meticulously constructed portraiture, which are influenced by her creativity and her background in fine art. Alma creates striking work that catches the eye and captivates the mind.
Photo: © alma haser
Jōji Hashiguchi is a Japanese photographer.
After photographing the streets of several European cities (Londres, Liverpool, West Berlin) and New York, he publishes the seminal book that launched his career as a photographer: "We Have no Place to Be" (Soshisha, 1982).
This book is re-published in an extended version in 2020 by Session Press: "We have no place to be 1980-1982".
You can find an interview of the photographer about this work on the British Journal of Photography website.
Shoko Hashimoto is a Japanses photographer born in 1939. He collaborated with Takuma Nakahira, Kazuo Kitai and Ihei Kimura.
Hashimoto has published many books, including recently Nishiyama Onsen (2014) and Undergrowth (2016) with Zen Foto Gallery.
English photographer known mainly for his portrait work around Preston Bus Station, published in several editions (in a zine form in 2010, by Loose Joints in 2015 and by Dashwood Books in 2017) and also the subject of a film in 2013.
Hawkesworth's photography work is also part of "On Keeping a Notebook" (The Gould Collection, volume four, 2019) along with an essay by Joan Didion.
His long-term project "The British Isles" about the United Kingdom was published by MACK in 2021.
Bill Henson (Melbourne, Australia, b.1955) is one of Australia’s most notable leaders in Contemporary photography. Notable influences on his work include the famous Melbourne painter and his long-term partner Louise Hearman, and the award-winning film director Paul Cox.
Photo: © smhcomau
Kenshichi Heshiki is a Japanese photographer.
He published in 2007 the photobook "Yagi no Hai / Lungs of a Goat" with Kage Shobo, a long-term project about Okinawa. The book was reprinted in 2018.
Todd Hido is an American photographer of the suburbia and the road. His more recent work tends to include female portraits and characters in the narrative.
Photo: © Daren Race
Kouhei Hirose is a young Japanese photographer represented by TPPG - Totem Pole Photo Gallery, Tokyo.
His book Yokushiroku has been published by Zen Foto Gallery (2018).