Showing posts with label Still Life Photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Still Life Photography. Show all posts

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Still Life Photography by Alejandra Laviada


Alejandra Laviada lives and works in Mexico City. Her works explores photography's shifting role and relationship to other artistic media, such us painting and sculpture. The images she creates emerge from the intersections between these different mediums, and aim to question and redefine photography's various roles and boundaries.









Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Black and White Photography by Charles Grogg


Charles Grogg is an American contemporary artist and photographer. He currently resides in southern California, producing fractured photographic images printed in platinum and palladium on handmade Japanese washi which are restitched into whole images and frequently feature tethers, sutures or other three dimensional productions. The resulting images focus on issues of growth and restraint, hesitation and power.











Saturday, January 8, 2011

Entoptic Phenomena by William Hundley


Nice photographs by William Hundley, professional photographer, who lives and works in Austin, Texas.











Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Photography by Sander Meisner


Sander Meisner is a self-taught photographer living and working in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
While he searches for beauty in the melancholy and desolation of overpasses, construction- and industrial areas he creates a certain tension by photographing these places from an unexpected angle, venturing out into the city discovering colorful beauty in the desolate corners of the gray man made structures.

Registration or the level of control over light through a lens is just the method. To truly get to the value of photography, Sander tries to do more than just capture reality, he tries to alter it, transform it. He tries to control the frame in such a way it generates an angle that enables him to construct new mindsets, new insights and identities.
Sander exposes the sleeping infrastructure of the urban environment and turns these usually overlooked corners into objects of desire. The lack of light and extremely long exposure of the photographic film add a secondary effect; any interaction of human movement becomes totally invisible. His pictures have an almost soothing sense of solitude.














Sunday, January 2, 2011

High Speed Photography by Martin Klimas


Martin Klimas destroys a lot of clay to make his art. Combining the silence of Eadweard Muybridge’s horse pictures with the association-rich composition of a still life, Klimas breaks recognizable objects so they become something else, and stops us just at the moment of transformation.



Martin Klimas was born in 1971 in Lake of Konstanz, Germany. He received his degree in Visual Communications from Fachhochschule Dusseldorf and has had many exhibitions in Germany and abroad. Klimas is currently represented by the Foley Gallery in New York and he can be commissioned for commercial work through Bransch.