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The AI Film ‘Dreams of Violets’ Is How You Get Me to Hate Movies

30 May 2026 at 13:45

A close-up of a woman with dark hair and brown eyes, looking ahead with a worried or anxious expression. Her mouth is slightly open, and the background appears blurred, showing an outdoor scene.

Yesterday, PetaPixel shared that a fully AI-generated film titled "Dreams of Violets" had been accepted into the Tribeca Film Festival. For some reason, there are people who insist this is the future of films. If that is the case, then congratulations: I hate movies.

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I Visited Lexar in China to Find Out Whether Photographers Can Trust Its Memory Cards

15 June 2026 at 18:50

A person in a cleanroom suit holds a silicon wafer in a high-tech lab, with a large 128GB Lexar Professional SD card image superimposed on the left.

When it comes to memory cards, most photographers just want them to work, have blistering specs, and be kind to their wallet. But which brand to choose? Last week PetaPixel took a trip to China to check in with one of the main players, Lexar.

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Nikon’s Classic Lenses Are Revered: A ‘Heritage Series’ Makes Too Much Sense

12 June 2026 at 18:01

Four vintage Nikon camera lenses are displayed in a row against a blurred pink and green floral background. Each lens has distinct markings and colored rings indicating different models and specifications.

Earlier this week, I published a "review" of sorts of the Nikon S3 rangefinder, which I believe to be one of the most beautiful cameras ever made. Through that experience, though, I was reminded of Nikon's vintage glass, and once again baffled by how the company hasn't remade them.

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  • ✇Vogue
  • Ukraine War Photostory PhotoVogue
    Dara Petrova's photographs reveal a side of war that rarely makes the news: its emotional weight, lingering uncertainty, and quiet presence in everyday life.
     
  • ✇PetaPixel
  • Photographers Are Tired of Big Cameras Jaron Schneider
    We were sitting on a train between neighborhoods in Osaka, Japan, when Chris Niccolls turned to me. "I'm thinking of buying a new camera," he said. I was shocked. Chris, who has a different camera in hand every week because of his job as a reviewer, actually wanted to own one. "I want something small." [Read More]
     

Photographers Are Tired of Big Cameras

11 June 2026 at 18:15

A man with short hair and a beard is holding a black camera up to his face, looking through the viewfinder as he takes a photo outdoors in bright daylight.

We were sitting on a train between neighborhoods in Osaka, Japan, when Chris Niccolls turned to me. "I'm thinking of buying a new camera," he said. I was shocked. Chris, who has a different camera in hand every week because of his job as a reviewer, actually wanted to own one. "I want something small."

[Read More]

  • ✇Colossal
  • Contrast Reigns in Austn Fischer’s Conspicuous Black-and-White Photos Grace Ebert
    “I started doing photography as a way to express things I don’t understand or to convey a message I’m having a hard time explaining,” Austn Fischer says. “I often work in quite a backwards way, knowing exactly what I want to arrange in front of the camera but struggling to understand the significance in my life until I am able to reflect on it after.” The Wisconsin-born, London-based photographer taps into fashion as performance, considering how our garments, style, and gestures convey par
     

Contrast Reigns in Austn Fischer’s Conspicuous Black-and-White Photos

23 April 2026 at 17:30
Contrast Reigns in Austn Fischer’s Conspicuous Black-and-White Photos

“I started doing photography as a way to express things I don’t understand or to convey a message I’m having a hard time explaining,” Austn Fischer says. “I often work in quite a backwards way, knowing exactly what I want to arrange in front of the camera but struggling to understand the significance in my life until I am able to reflect on it after.”

The Wisconsin-born, London-based photographer taps into fashion as performance, considering how our garments, style, and gestures convey parts of our identities. Contrast is key in Fischer’s work, and it emerges through unusual pairings like lace ruffs atop athletic garb or an angular, black gown with a dainty, horse-shaped wire armature. Whether a portrait or a more conceptual composition, each work harnesses an exuberant sense of play and homes in on our ability to remake ourselves anew.

a black and white photo by Austn Fischer of david byrne underneath a light with his hand raised as if giving an oath
David Byrne

“Growing up, I had a lot of questions around my sexuality and my own experience as a man. I naturally gravitated towards fashion because of the story clothing can convey in an image,” he adds. “The colours, shape, fabric, and the way clothing wraps around a model create a unique conversation around identity and the body.”

Fischer has collaborated with a range of editorial and commercial clients, shooting Ai Weiwei with a milkshake for The New Statesman, for example, and David Byrne seemingly under oath for Crack Magazine. Whether working on a personal project or a commissioned series, the photographer transforms a largely black-and-white palette that could appear harsh into scenes exuding warmth and softness.

Better understanding his own emotions is Fischer’s priority at the moment, following a series of painful experiences, both personal and professional, that have influenced what and how he’s creating. “Recently, I spent two weeks from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. painting a wall in a church white over and over to understand patience and reflect on myself. I’m working a lot on understanding emotion and myself through putting my body through different tasks or challenges,” he tells Colossal.

Explore more of Fischer’s portfolio on his website and Instagram.

a black and white photo by Austn Fischer of a woman in a tracksuit and frilly collar
a black and white photo by Austn Fischer of ai weiwei holding a milkshake
Ai Weiwei
a black and white photo by Austn Fischer of two people in a crude horse costume
a black and white photo by Austn Fischer of david byrne sitting on a chair beneath hanging shirts
David Byrne
a black and white photo by Austn Fischer of a woman in a black dress with a wire horse sculpture

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Contrast Reigns in Austn Fischer’s Conspicuous Black-and-White Photos appeared first on Colossal.

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