Simon Norfolk

His work is featured regularly in the National Geographic, the New York Times Magazine and The Guardian Weekend.

He also studied at University of Bristol and Hertord College, in Oxford, earning a degree in Philosophy and Sociology.

[2] He is considered a landscape photographer, who has dedicated himself to document some of the most serious contemporary war zones and refugee crisis, often depicting the aftermath of the conflicts and its results on land and people.

The website Widewalls states that "Without the subjectiveness of most photojournalism, these landscapes allow the viewer to draw their own conclusion on the effects war.

He took aim to historical photography with his book Burke + Norfolk (2001), dedicated to the work of the Irish photographer John Burke during the Second Anglo-Afghan War, in the 1880s, and his own work inspired by it and related to the contemporary war in the same country.