K. Flo Razowsky is a U.S.-born queer and gender non-conforming documentary visual journalist focused on social justice issues. Working from the Jewish principle of Tikkun Olam (to be a part of repairing the world), Razowsky has photographed activist and liberation movements in the U.S., Bahrain, Serbia, Israel/Palestine and Ukraine.
Razowsky's "Up Against the Wall," a visual and comparative investigation of global borders, was featured in the Wall Street Journal, and named one of the best photographic essays of 2015 by Slate. Razowsky’s work has been shown at Mana Contemporary in Jersey City, NJ (2019), Sacramento State Library Gallery (2017), El Centro Cultural de la Raza in San Diego (2017), the Mizna + Radius of American Arab Writers (RAWI) Conference (2016) and Vine Arts Center (2011) in Minneapolis, MN, and Treeo Gallery in Phoenix (2016).
In 2018, Razowsky was a Magnum Foundation Photography and Social Justice Fellow, producing “Dwelling,” a visual exploration on the architecture of homelessness in Los Angeles, CA and “Being Barbara,” a multimedia piece highlighting the logistical challenges of being unsheltered, made in collaboration with a woman living on the streets of Times Square, NY.
Currently, Razowsky is a Director’s Fellow in the Documentary Practice and Visual Journalism program at the International Center of Photography in New York City.