Miyajima Island Beach Front

stan.jernigan has added a photo to the pool:

Miyajima Island Beach Front

I took this photo on an overcast day at “Miyajima Island Beach" with my iPhone 17 Pro Max while visiting Miyajima Island, Japan. I love the beach’s curvature, its cleanliness, and the homes in the background. The beach leads to the iconic Torii Gate and to the Itsukushima Shrine…

Partnership Spotlight: Flickr x Black Women Photographers

Photography has always been more than images. It’s memory, documentation, storytelling, resistance, joy – humanity. For years, Black women photographers have shaped visual culture while remaining underrepresented in many of the spaces where creative careers are built. In 2020, Black Women Photographers (BWP), founded by Polly Irungu, launched with a mission to create visibility, opportunity, and community for Black women and non-binary photographers around the world.

Love in Black August

What began as a directory quickly grew into something larger: a global network offering grants, mentorship, education, and pathways toward sustainable creative careers. Since partnering with Black Women Photographers, Flickr has been proud to support that work through funding opportunities, visibility initiatives, community spaces, and artist spotlights.

_MG_4780

Supporting Photographers through Grants

One of the most meaningful parts of the Flickr and Black Women Photographers partnership has been the continued expansion of grant opportunities designed to support photographers in advancing their work.

Over the years, these grants have increased in size and reach:

  • 2022 Grant:$1,200
  • 2023 Grant: $2,500
  • 2025 Grant: $5,000
  • 2026 Grant: Announcing soon! 

The numbers going up year over year is intentional. This is a long-term commitment, not a one-time initiative.

Each cycle has included more than funding. Recipients also receive Flickr Pro and SmugMug memberships, giving photographers the tools to keep building their portfolios and growing their practice long after the grant period ends. Black Women Photographers members have also joined as guest judges, including Flickr member since 2004, Edwina Hay, bringing their perspective to the next cycle of photographers.

June McDoom by Edwina Hay

Celebrating the photographers behind the work

Every grant cycle has highlighted photographers exploring deeply personal and universal themes through their images. Themes have centered around identity, change, belonging, memory, environment, and the spaces we occupy physically and emotionally. 

Recipient of the 2022 Inaugural Flickr x Black Women Photographers grant –
Naomi St Juste with Two Become One

Two become one  - Intimacy of Change

Grant support: $1,200 grant fund, Flickr Pro and SmugMug membership, plus memberships for ten additional recipients. 

Naomi St Juste, a self-taught photographer based in Birmingham, United Kingdom, became the first recipient of the Flickr, SmugMug, and Black Women Photographers grant for her image Two Become One. Created around the theme “The Intimacy of: Change,” her work explored transformation through the lens of marriage, family, and new beginnings. Her first camera was a Sony A5000 but her earliest memories of photography are of taking disposable cameras on school trips and to other special events.

Her work set the tone for future grant cycles by demonstrating how deeply personal stories can resonate across communities.  

Recipient of the 2023 Flickr x Black Women Photographers Grant –
Genesis Falls with Children at Play

Children At Play

Grant support: $2,500 fund, two-year Flickr Pro membership, one-year SmugMug Pro membership, plus memberships for ten additional recipients. 

Chicago-based photographer Genesis Falls received the 2023 grant, which expanded support to $2,500, marking continued growth in Flickr and BWP’s investment in Black women photographers. Genesis is a contemporary portrait photographer whose work often uses black-and-white film to capture emotion, intimacy, and fleeting moments of connection.

Her winning image was recognized for the way light moved through water and the emotional atmosphere created within the frame perfectly capturing the theme, “Light in Motion”. Beyond becoming a grant recipient, Genesis later returned as a grant judge and collaborator, helping shape future Flickr x BWP initiatives.

Recipient of the 2025 Flickr x Black Women Photographers Grant –
Eleonore Menga with Living Our Space  

living_our_space-1

Grant support: $5,000 grant, two-year Flickr Pro membership, one-year SmugMug Pro membership, plus memberships for ten additional recipients. 

Eleonore Menga received the partnership’s largest grant to date: $5,000, awarded through the theme “The Spaces We Occupy.” Her winning image, Living Our Space, used double exposure techniques inspired by photographer Carrie Mae Weems to explore family, joy, identity, and the environments that shape us. 

Originally from Switzerland and now based in Montreal, Eleonore is a portrait and documentary photographer whose work is deeply rooted in identity, emotion, and connection. Drawing from her Congolese and Haitian heritage, she captures the beauty and resilience of Afrodescendant and diasporic stories, often through these intimate moments at home with family.

Beyond funding: creating spaces for visibility

The best partnerships don’t stop at the announcement. Over the years, Flickr and Black Women Photographers have collaborated through artist features, curated galleries, community discussions, and opportunities that put Black women photographers in front of new audiences. BWP is doing incredible work and we’re proud to be part of it.

The Spaces we occupy : Reroute and re-root
The Spaces We Occupy
Family

Get Involved

The Black Women Photographers Flickr group continues to serve as a space for members to share work, discover new artists, and connect with a broader creative community.

Whether you’re looking for inspiration, conversation, or photographers to follow, the group showcases an incredible range of perspectives and visual storytelling.

Explore the Black Women Photographers group on Flickr: https://www.flickr.com/groups/blackwomenphotographers/

Learn more about Black Women Photographers

Black Women Photographers is a global community supporting thousands of photographers through programming, grants, education, and networking opportunities.

To learn more about membership, opportunities, and upcoming initiatives, visit blackwomenphotographers.com.

Bubbles

Looking ahead

The future of photography is shaped by who has access to resources, community, and visibility.

We’re grateful to continue supporting Black Women Photographers and the artists shaping visual culture through their work. We look forward to celebrating more photographers, creating more opportunities, and sharing more of what’s to come. Keep an eye out for our Flickr x Black Women Photographers 2026 grant announcement coming this summer! 

Munger Moss Motel

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Munger Moss Motel

The Marlon D. Beltran Collection

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

The Marlon D. Beltran Collection

Found Kodachrome Slide

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Kodachrome Slide

date stamped on slide September 1961

Hudspeth Appraisal District

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Hudspeth Appraisal District

Watch This

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Watch This

MetaFilter

The past 24 hours of MetaFilter

So convenient that it's simply not plausible

Ted Chiang on the question of LLM consciousness, Anthropic's fantastical "constitution," and the repulsive end state of its thought experiments.

Chiang is the best to ever do it, in my opinion, when it comes to breaking down LLM hype in clear, compelling, readable prose, and this may be his best yet. The whole thing is deeply quotable, but a few standouts:
Should you consider the possibility that every time you open a Word document you are bringing multiple conscious interlocutors into existence, and every time you close one you snuff their existence out? No. Contemplating that scenario is not a good use of your time. Even if the Microsoft Office team employed a philosopher who said you shouldn't be so certain, because consciousness is not well understood, that would not be sufficient reason for you to take this idea seriously. ... In a New Yorker article about Anthropic earlier this year, Amanda Askell describes how a person grieving the loss of a dog might consult Claude. Askell says an appropriate response from Claude would be, "As an A.I., I do not have direct personal experiences, but I do understand." How is this appropriate, given that Claude does not actually understand? If I type "I am grieving the loss of my dog" into a conventional search engine, the first result I get is a post from a Reddit forum called r/Pets; the post is titled "Struggling After Losing My Dog: Looking for Advice on Coping with Grief," and the comments are from people who share their experiences of loss. We would never say that a search engine understands what it's like to lose a dog, or even that the internet itself understands. Other humans understand what it's like to lose a dog; they have posted about their experiences on the internet, and a search engine offers a way for you to find what they've said (and to potentially interact with them). I would argue that the search-engine experience is not only more transparent than a chatbot about what is happening; it is psychologically healthier for the user. ... Employing philosophers might endow LLM companies with an air of respectability that slot-machine makers don't get from the behavioral psychologists they hire, but in both cases the companies are preying on people's tendency to see something that's not there.

Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Meta Workers Can Opt Out of Workplace Tracking for Up to 30 Minutes

Meta is scaling back parts of its employee tracking initiative after staff objected to software that collected mouse movements, clicks, keystrokes, and other actions for AI training data. According to Reuters, the company will now let workers pause collection for up to 30 minutes and request exemptions. Reuters reports: [Stephane Kasriel, a vice president in Meta's AI model-building Superintelligence Labs unit] said the team behind the software had also introduced "several optimizations" to reduce its impact on computer battery life, after employees complained it was consuming so much data it was causing their home internet usage to spike. "While we remain confident in the privacy protections we put in place at launch, which went through several layers of risk review, we have heard your concerns about personal data on work devices, battery life, and wanting more control over when capturing happens," Kasriel said in the memo.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

thexiffy

Last.fm last recent tracks from thexiffy.

Architect - If Jim Would Jam With Richie

Architect