JamesEstrin

@JamesEstrin

New York Times Lens Blog Co-Editor and Senior Staff Photographer

New York
Joined September 2008

Tweets

You blocked @JamesEstrin

Are you sure you want to view these Tweets? Viewing Tweets won't unblock @JamesEstrin

  1. Retweeted

    Sinclair canceled a $25k pledge to ’s foundation because the press photographers association stood by its code of ethics. Let’s fill that gap. Donate:

    Undo
  2. Retweeted
    9 hours ago

    Press photographers group criticizes Sinclair Broadcast Group for news promos—and Sinclair responds by withdrawing donation pledge.

    Undo
  3. 13 hours ago

    Photographers. You should apply now for the 's Moving Walls exhibition series, and be eligible for a fellowship of $30,000–$60,000 to support ongoing or new work on the theme of migration.

    Undo
  4. 13 hours ago

    Temple Elephants Find Friends and Care at This Retreat in India

    Undo
  5. Retweeted
    Apr 4

    The painful legacy of land mines left from the Balkan War

    Undo
  6. Apr 3

    This is an amazing opportunity to get your work exhibited at Photoville in NYC and around the World.

    Undo
  7. Apr 3

    Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was a visual tactician who understood the power of the camera.

    Undo
  8. Apr 3

    Join me, Iaritza Menjivar and Anrong Xu for "PHOTOGRAPHING FAMILY: The Personal Becomes Political," this Saturday at 4:30 PM at Pier 94 in NYC

    Undo
  9. Apr 2
    Undo
  10. Retweeted
    Mar 31

    What might be most extraordinary about Dr. King and photography is not how the medium defined him, but how skillfully he used it to define the story of civil rights

    Undo
  11. Mar 30

    Apply to the grant in humanistic photography. Deadline May 31!

    Undo
  12. Mar 30

    Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was a visual tactician who understood the power of the camera.

    Undo
  13. Mar 30

    The most compelling photographs of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. were not idealistic or simple, but portrayed his complexity and humanity.

    Undo
  14. Retweeted
    Mar 29

    He photographed more than 50 L.G.B.T.Q. Africans in 10 countries across Europe and North America

    Undo
  15. Retweeted
    Mar 29
    Undo
  16. Mar 28

    ‘It Was Like My Disability Became a Gift’

    Undo
  17. Retweeted
    Mar 27

    Al Smith's photos capture not just the jazz scene of 1940s Seattle, but also the complexity of life in a midcentury African-American community

    Undo
  18. Mar 27

    Photos of the dynamic black community and thriving jazz scene of 1940s Seattle

    Undo
  19. Mar 26

    When Federica Armstrong discovered that she lived a mere mile from one of Silicon Valley’s many toxic Superfund sites, she set out to photograph and document the rest.

    Undo
  20. Retweeted
    Mar 24

    To tell the Stormy story right, we spoke to Judd Apatow, Nina Hartley, Ron Jeremy, the Penthouse Baton Rouge and a Maryland-based horseman named Packy McGaughan. Your move, .

    Undo

Loading seems to be taking a while.

Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.

    You may also like

    ·