I am currently a senior visuals editor for The Atlantic where I commission original photography and do image research for the magazine’s digital features, special projects and poetry section. Since joining this team in 2021, I have worked on stories about the failure of policing in Memphis, the preservation of American history and the complexities of postcolonial identity. Here are some of the highlights so far.
Photograph by David Avazzadeh for The Living
Photograph by Balarama Heller for When Walking, I Keep My Eyes Straight Ahead
Photograph by Awol Erizku for Ngũgĩ in America
Photographs by Arko Datto for Climate Change is Stretching Mumbai to Its Limit
Photographs by Acacia Johnson for How Long Until Alaska’s Next Disaster?
Photographs by Amani Willett for Nantucket Doesn't Belong to the Preppies
Photographs by Whitten Sabbatini for The Murders in Memphis Aren’t Stopping
Digital alterations by Ken Gonzales-Day for Now We Know Their Names
Digital alterations by Ken Gonzales-Day for Now We Know Their Names
Photographs by Dannielle Bowman for What It’s Like to Be Black and Disabled in America
Photographs by Nate Palmer for Burying a Burning
Photographs by Donavon Smallwood for Broken Sestina Reaching for Black Joy