The best photography exhibitions of 2016 (London) - Alina Reyzelman

The best photography exhibitions of 2016 (London)

If you are in London this summer, make sure you visit these photography exhibits.

Accoridng to the Telegrath they are must see!

Strange and Familiar: Britain as revealed by international photographers

Where: Barbican

Address: Silk St, London EC2Y 8DS

Until: June 19

In a nutshell: An enormous. Martin Parr curated exhibition of Britain seen through the lenses of international photographers from the Thirties to today: from iconic images by established greats such as Henri Cartier-Bresson and Paul Strand to previously unseen images by Japanese artist Shinro Ohtake, who roamed Seventies Britain without a word of English.

Performing for the Camera, Tate Modern

Where: Tate Modern

Address: Bankside, London SE1 9TG

Until: June 12

In a nutshell: Selfies, marketing, early ballet films and school photographs all feature in this intriguing Tate exhibition. An impressive array of artists including Marcel Duchamp, Cindy Sherman, and Yayoi Kusama back up the thesis that performance is essential to photography.

Paul Strand: Photography and Film for the 20th Century

Where: V&A

Address: Exhibition Road, London SW7 2RL

Until: July 3

In a nutshell: A beautifully put-together retrospective:  Paul Strand’s images of timeless Americana – clapboard shopfronts and New Mexican adobe churches – are among the defining works of modernist photography.

Vogue 100: A Century of Style

Where: National Portrait Gallery

Address: St. Martin’s Pl, London WC2H 0HE

Until: May 22

In a nutshell: Visiting this extraordinary journey back in time through the fashion bible’s archives is like flicking at random through a copy of Vogue that you’re physically walking through. A knockout exhibition about storytelling, image-making and personalities

Otherworlds: Visions of our Solar System

Where: Natural History Museum

Address: Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD

Until: May 15

In a nutshell: Curated by artist and writer Michael Benson and featuring original music by Brian Eno, Otherworlds explores the beauty of the solar system. Art and science combine in the 77 composite images on display.