Martin Bogren (born 1967) is a Swedish documentary photographer, living in Malmö.[1][2] He has made "understated books full of quietly observed moments shot in grainy black and white."[3]
In the early 1990s he photographed bands and artists.[1] He toured for several years with the Swedish pop group the Cardigans, making a "diaristic book", The Cardigans: Been it (1997).[1][12] He has since established his signature style,[12] making—in the words of Sean O'Hagan in The Guardian—"understated books full of quietly observed moments shot in grainy black and white."[3] In Ocean (2008) "his subjects were a group of men from Rajasthan, who had travelled the 1,000-odd miles from their inland home by minibus to bathe in the sea for the first time."[12] For Lowlands (2011), Bogren revisited his childhood home of Skurup over 4 years, "to portray the inhabitants, environments and atmosphere of the village",[11] "a rural Swedish idyll peopled with strange and beautiful characters."[12] For Tractor Boys (2013) "he immersed himself in the enclosed world of a group of adolescent boys from rural Sweden who customise and race old cars for fun."[3]Italia (2016), made in Naples, Palermo, Bologna and Turin, is "Bogren's take on street photography".[3]August Song (2020) was made during summers between 2013 and 2018, at music venues hidden in woods on the outskirts of villages in rural parts of Sweden.[13]Passenger (2021) was made over several stays in Calcutta, India and for the first time mixes colour photographs with his usual black and white.[14]