<em>Plate 23, Aircraft, at right, is seen as it is about to fly into the World Trade Center in New York on Tuesday. The aircraft was the second to fly into the tower Tuesday morning. http://www.forrestmarketing.com/worldtradecenters/attack.html</em>, 2011
<em>Plate 7,  BMW in the pool at Garden Health and Fitness, http://acidcow.com/pics/3477-oops_or_shit_happens_64_pics.html</em>, 2011
<em>Plate 85, The killing of "Crankshaft" during operation Neptune's Spear. Photographs of Osama Bin Laden's body were taken but never released.</em>, 2011
<em>ALIAS: Dora Fobert (1925-1943). Image 1 from the archive of Adela K., Ca 1942</em>, 2011
<em>ALIAS: Dora Fobert (1925-1943). Image 4 from the archive of Adela K., Ca 1942</em>, 2011
<em>ALIAS: Dora Fobert (1925-1943). Image 5 from the archive of Adela K., Ca 1942</em>, 2011
<em>ALIAS: Dora Fobert (1925-1943). Image 10 from the archive of Adela K., Ca 1942</em>, 2011
<em>ALIAS: Dora Fobert (1925-1943) From the archive of Adela K., Ca 1942 (Installation Detail)</em>, 2011
<em>27 September 1996 Sheet 27 Frame 9</em>, 2010
<em>Political 1 sheet 19</em>, 2010
<em>Culture 3 sheet 72</em>, 2010
<em>Untitled (Hand with microphone)</em>, 2010
<em>Untitled (Girl looking)</em>, 2010
<em>The Day Nobody Died (The Brothers Suicide</em>, 2008
<em>The Press Conference</em>, 2008
<em>The Day Nobody Died (Installation view, Galerie Karsten Greve)</em>, 2009
<em>The Day Nobody Died (film)</em>, 2008
<em>I sowed dragons, I reaped fleas (from the Prestige of Terror)</em>, 2010
<em>To express the feelings of a chair when we sit on it. (from the Prestige of Terror)</em>, 2010
<em>A few hours before his death, he had revealed to his wife that baby elephants die alone (from the Prestige of Terror)</em>, 2010
<em>Chicago #34 (Road No.1 between Ma'ale Edummim and Jericho #2)</em>, 2006
<em>Chicago #4</em>, 2006
<em>Chicago (Installation view from 'Facts, Fictions and Stories', Stedelijk Museum)</em>, 2007
<em>US Army, Victoria's Secret, Harley Davidson, Loreal, Paris, Adidas, American Landscape Series</em>, 2009
<em>Toyota, Gap, Honda, Hummer, American Landscape Series</em>, 2009
<em>NBC, CBS, UPN, ABC, FOX, HBO, American Landscape Series</em>, 2009
<em>Heidi Klum, Volvo, American Landscape Series</em>, 2009
<em>Afterlife No.7 (Installation view from 'Ficciones', Goodman Gallery)</em>, 2009
<em>Afterlife 1 (Installation Image)</em>, 2009
<em>Afterlife 9 (Installation Image)</em>, 2009
<em>Afterlife 5 (Installation Image)</em>, 2009
<em>Afterlife (Installation Image)</em>, 2009
<em>Self-portrait by Mario, Ren Vallejo Psychiatric Hospital, Cuba</em>, 2003
<em>Mandela (Caesar's Palace casino, South Africa)</em>, 2004
<em>Chicago #12</em>, 2006
<em>Timmy, Peter and Frederick (Pollsmoor Prison, South Africa)</em>, 2003
<em>Ground Control (Star City, Russia)</em>, 2003
<em>Fig. 15</em>, 2008
Adam Broomberg & Oliver Chanarin
Plate 23, Aircraft, at right, is seen as it is about to fly into the World Trade Center in New York on Tuesday. The aircraft was the second to fly into the tower Tuesday morning. http://www.forrestmarketing.com/worldtradecenters/attack.html, 2011
Work on Paper
30 x 24cm
edition of 8 plus 2 artist's proofs

The work of Adam Broomberg and Oliver Chanarin interrogates the documentary and ethnographic traditions of photography with great subtlety and respect.

In The Day Nobody Died, the pair joined the British Army in Helmand Province to make a series of photographs of the Afghanistan war. In response to each event they witnessed, they unpacked a fresh part of a 50m roll of photographic paper, exposed it to the light for 20 seconds, and then put it away again. The resulting searingly beautiful, abstract, camera-less photographs are in one sense the antithesis of war photography as photojournalism delineates it. But the work does communicate the impossibility of representing the pain and horror of personal tragedy. The more recent series People in Trouble again casts an oblique glance at a site of intense, long running conflict: the Troubles in Northern Ireland. They have meticulously researched the archives of the Belfast Exposed photography workshops. Very often the same contact sheet that record bombings, riots and burning cars, also reveal the ordinary stuff of life: kids playing on the street, girlfriends posing naked for their boyfriends; families at home, in bed or in the bath. Because the archive has always been available to the public, faces are scratched out. The artists isolate and illuminate this blow-by-blow history of how this archive has been read and continues to be reread. The critic David Campany cites their work as being exemplary of 'late photography': excavating ever deeper their supposedly limited medium of choice to find new visual challenges and possibilities.