David Kregenow is an accomplished architectural and industrial photographer and a former student of Folkwang school.
Photo : ©David Kregenow Photographer, Facebook
Natalie Krick is an American photographer; she is known for her pictures of women in ultra-feminine makeovers she calls "female drag"
She worked with her mother as a model for the series called "Natural Deceptions" which won the "Aperture's 2017 Portfolio Prize" and was published by Skylark Editions in 2017.
© Portrait taken from the website Der Greif
Anouk Kruithof is a Dutch visual artist and photographer whose exhibitions and books merge social, conceptual, photographic, performance and video. She is best known for her artist's books "Happy Birthday to You" (self-published, 2011), praised by Martin Parr and "A Head with Wings" (Little Brown Mushroom, 2011), praised by critic Jörg Colberg.
She studied photography at the Academy of Art and Design St. Joost, Breda. In 2011 she moved to New York to live and work on her art projects.
Her multilayered, interdisciplinary approach encompasses photography, sculpture, installation, artist-books, text, performance, video, animation, websites and interventions in the public domain.
Among her other photobooks and publications: "Pixel Stress" (RVB Books, 2013), "The Bungalow" (Onomatopee, 2014), "Automagic" (Editorial RM, 2016) and "Universal Tongue" (Art Paper Editions, 2021).
© Self-portrait of the artist
Calin Kruse is a young German editor and photographer who generates an amazing variety and quantity of publications and activities. The works presented by dienacht, his magazine & publishing house, are usually of a powerful content, which lead to reflection on photography and social, political, gender issues, about the body and sexuality.
Photo : © Franzi
Roberto Kusterle is an Italian photographer. In the early years of his artistic career, he focused on painting and installations.
He is still using various material - and various techniques - to present his photography work. His work is often connected to the animal world and nature in general.
He has published many photobooks and catalogues since the seventies; and he recently published a series of unbound images titled "Cartacei" (studiofaganel, 2020).
© Portrait of the artist by Elisabetta Pesenti taken from a biography of the artist on the website Venti d'Arte.
Alain Laboile is a self-taught photographer, a skilled metalworker by trade, who discovered that he had a talent and a passion for photography.
Photo: © self-portrait
Tomasz Laczny is a visual artist, researcher, bookmaker and educator. He is based in London.
After initially working creating computer generated images (CGI), he changed course and [from his website] « shifted his interest into the past and now is rediscovering history, with a special emphasis on family stories. Laczny’s work questions the constitution of national identity and examines its relationship to personal identity. He explores it especially in the face of traumatic events like war, occupation or displacement. »
His work is mostly expressed and seen thorugh photobooks that are often self-published and handmade.
Among other works, he has published: "40 / place which does not exist" (self-published, 2016), "Disappearance" (self-published, 2018), "Almost True" (VOID, 2018), and "Erna Helena Ania" (Blow Up Press / self-published, 2021).
© Self-portrait of the artist
Joe Lai is a French photographer whose work mainly revolves around portraits and representations of the body.
He has published the following photobooks: "Showa" (Libraryman, 2020), "Big Hair" (Libraryman, 2021) and "Pinku" (APE / Art Paper Editions, 2022).
Álvaro Laiz is a Spanish photographer whose work deals with narratives where traditional culture, nature and industrial development converge; his anthropological and environmental photography frequently take him to some of the most remote zones of the world
© Portrait taken from the artist's Vimeo account
Sandder Lanen is a Dutch, self-taught photographer and film-maker.
Sandder self-published the photobook ''L'Appel du vide'' in 2018, a book about disappearing.
Margaret Lansink is a Dutch photographer.
Visual investigation of the relationship between humans and their (physical) environment is the main focus of Lansinks work, she often feels like a spectator of a play; looking from the outside in to what happens. In her work, Lansink explores relationships, trying to bridge the personal and the universal. The way she photographs is purely intuitive; her images present an open and honest reflection of her own inner emotions at a certain time, space and interaction.
Her series "Borders of Nothingness - On the Mend", about a separation from and her reunion with her daughter was presented in the "Off" of the Rencontres d'Arles festival in 2017, and published with the same title by the(M) éditions in 2020. In 2020 as well, she publishes "Body Maps" with Origini Edizioni.
Margaret Lansink had previously self-published three photobooks, including "Fear no More" in 2017 and "The Kindness of One" (in collaboration with Kaunas Gallery, Lithuania) in 2019.
© Portrait & biographic elements taken from the artist's website