We have been always been fascinated how Black Holes look like since we don't have any photographic proof of the celestial phenomenon. We usually have an artist representation of simply a spinning black object with some light at its ends. But capturing something that can also absorb light is never easy because it is very far and needs to have a collaborative efforts of many institutions and astronomers.
Recently the Event Horizons Telescope has released an image of an actual black hole which is in the middle of the galaxy M87 located in the nearby Virgo galaxy cluster. To make this image, it took more than 200 researchers and 8 light ground-based radio telescopes from different parts of the world to capture a well coordinated picture of it. It may seem like a star with a huge sunspot, but it is made up of thousands of stars form that galaxy with a huge dark void in the middle.