"a photo of Mike" = Mike is in the picture. Mike is the main focus of the picture.
"a photo of Mike's" = a photo that Mike owns, or a photo that Mike took. As Dan said, we don't know what is in the photo.
There is a misleading answer to this question written by another commenter, so I want to clarify: there is nothing grammatically incorrect, unclear, or confusing about either one of these. They are both clear and correct. They simply have different meanings.