Posted by Fabio 24 November 2010
Andrew B. Myers is a photographer and digital image maker that resides in Toronto. His colorful and detailed pictures are very carefully crafted, with an approach that always plays with both analog as well as digital techniques to achieve a certain look and sensibility. He is currently completing his studies at Ryerson University and has been exhibited in the Toronto area. read more
Posted by Fabio 22 November 2010
Philippe Halsman (Latvian: Filips Halsmans; 2 May 1906 Riga, Latvia – 25 June 1979 New York City) was a Latvian-born American portrait photographer. read more
Posted by Fabio 19 November 2010
Fumie Sasabuchi was born in Tokyo, Japan, in 1975. Lives and works in Munich, Germany.
Posted by Fabio 18 November 2010
Popel Coumou looks for the romanticism in geometry and human absence. The way the outline of a dusty window is projected on a bleak floor shows the almost tangible loneliness in her photographs. Nevertheless the source of these works is a lot less evident than first suspected. read more
Posted by Fabio 15 November 2010
Danish Anders Terp holds an MSc in Landscape Architecture from the University of Denmark. Terp recently relocated to Bergen in Norway where he currently works alongside the council planning and designing the layout of graveyards both in the cityscape and countryside of Bergen. read more
Posted by Fabio 12 November 2010
Trine Søndergaard’s work is marked by a precision and a sensibility that co-exists with a rigorous interrogation of the medium of photography, its boundaries and what constitutes an image. Layered with meaning and quiet emotion, her works are highly acclaimed for their visual intensification of our perception of reality. Her first monograph, Now That You Are Mine, was published by Steidl in 2002.
www.trinesondergaard.com
Posted by Fabio 11 November 2010
Since 1980 Michel Séméniako has photographed landscapes, architecture and objects at night. He favours places of memory or of historical significance, creating his images with the help of light beams. Using very long exposure time, he moves around the photographed space, lighting it with flashlights while managing never to appear in the image.