Dust
Ujin Lee must have had a really fun time creating his Dust series. Each of the five photographs in it are beautifully composed, with this first one being my favorite!
via piet mondriaan

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Ujin Lee must have had a really fun time creating his Dust series. Each of the five photographs in it are beautifully composed, with this first one being my favorite!
via piet mondriaan
Props is a series by Semâ Bekirovic which i like for its shameless artificiality.
via: Flores en el ático
We grew out of Andreas Gursky a couple months back, after we received an email from a copyright protection company that works for him, in which they kindly and subtly threatened to sue. That’s precisely why we savored this piece by Florian Freier as much as we did. In it, he uses Google Earth to recreate a large scale photograph taken by Gursky in Bahrain, which he later printed himself… I wish there was a free high res download of it so that EVERYONE could print their own Gursky without the fear of being threatened by the dog artist and his posse.
Yet, in any case, you can check out the “making of” video here:
(Thanks Ed!)
These photographs document different acoustic listening devices developed for the Dutch army as part of air defense systems research between World Wars 1 and 2.
What’s not to love about Connie Wang’s photographs? Seriously.
There’s a bunch more following the jump!
There’s not much to say here, except that I like Toby Burrows‘ photographs.
Best way to kick off the weekend? A beautiful spread in the dunes of Katharina Friedrich, photographed by Christoph Musiol!
There’s lots of things that I like about Amber Marie Chavez (a.k.a. Marie Edwards) photographic work. These include her color palette, how natural and easy they feel, the way they are composed and her sense of humor. There’s a good lot of her work following the jump!
The Forest is the name of this magical set of b/w photographs by Bernard Hunt, who states, “inspired by Surrealism and the traditional landscape photograph, The Forest series depicts a dark, silent, and timeless space, a psychological arena where we wait for something to happen, or contemplate on what’s just occurred.”