The Leica Camera Blog on Sept. 23 published Art and War, a photo essay by an Australian photographer documenting conflict and post-conflict landscapes across Australia, Angola, Burma, Burundi, Cambodia and other countries.
The project follows the photographer through regions shaped by war and its aftermath, combining travel photography with documentary reporting. The post presents a long-running visual record of places and people encountered in conflict-affected settings, with the work framed around movement, memory and the human impact of violence.
According to the blog post, the photographer has traveled across four continents for the project, focusing on a range of locations that include both active and historical conflict zones. The geographic span gives the essay a broad sweep, moving from Australia to Africa and Southeast Asia.
The images are presented in a documentary style that emphasizes people, landscapes and traces of conflict. The Leica blog describes the work as sitting at the intersection of art, journalism and travel photography, with the camera used to capture visual details that reflect both place and history.
The post places the essay in the context of image-led storytelling, a format familiar to audiences that follow visual reporting across digital platforms and live-camera feeds such as live streams. For readers who track remote locations through imagery, the project underscores how photographs can shape public understanding of distant places.
The blog post does not list a price or commercial availability. More information is available in the Leica Camera Blog entry titled Art and War.
For Volve Vision readers, the essay joins a steady stream of place-based visual coverage spanning news, camera news and live-image reporting from cities and landmarks around the world.






