There has always been something incredibly haunting to me about the countryside that surrounds Oakdale, California, the small, rural Central Valley town that I grew up in.
In this selection of a larger series I am working on, I have been traveling alone due to the pandemic, and creating large panoramic formats of landscapes while altering the scene in front of me with a variety of mirrors.
In my series Hold Me Tight, I explore moments of intimacy and vulnerability between my husband and two teenage sons, often while on family vacations in nature.
We both live in the north of Tenerife, so we headed towards the south of the island, where he usually meets his family to train and spend some time with.
"Corona Time”, unfortunately, severely limited our worldwide touring options! We found ourselves trapped in the studio. We decided to create an alternative imaginative nature reservation adventure to satisfy our adventurous spirits.
It was meaningful to celebrate my 50-year retrospective here in the region at the Kulturfabrik in Apolda sponsored by Marion Schneider and curated by Klaus Bohn in 2019.
This photography portfolio titled “The Shape of Things” aims to open and expand your awareness of your urban environs. Living constantly busier lives, we as urbanites forget to look around or observe the most basic fundamental element of our cities
Mark Parrish presents his debut photography campaign ‘Prints for Afghanistan’, with a selection of previously unseen images that have been some 45 years in the making.
During the Covid pandemic, the momentum of the daily life slowed down. Outside for solitary expeditions, the familiar transformed into a new kind of magical discovery, as if witnessed for the first time.
Hotel Girl, is a photo series that has been inspired by the bizarre metaphysical sense that you get from places that you feel that they are haunted with many different sentiments and feelings, of people that have lived there in the past.
My project is an attempt to see, approach, and recreate the image of my father, to live out my feelings for him. I didn't know my dad, I didn't know him and my mom as a family, as a couple, they divorced when I was about 7 months old.
This work belongs to the series entitled "Melothesia", a term that designated in Greek the affective relationship by affinity between all things, terrestrial and celestial, that populate the universe.
Professional photography is a difficult profession to master. It takes an immense amount of practice, skill, and knowledge to be able to take amazing pictures day in and day out.
From the frigid thin-air mountains to the sultry moist valleys of Nepal, human life is deeply bonded to nature. It is where they find resources for their survival and opportunities to generate income.
This series emerged from frustration and desperation. It took birth on its own as if the existence was there but denied consciously. Since we never care for our blind spot and pretend to be smart in every move, it rests there.
Noir, film noir and neo noir are my favorite genre in movies. Noir is something more than just visual style, low key lighting or compositions breaking all the rules.
Kaspiysk is a small town on the shore of Caspian sea in Dagestan, in the south of Russia. It was built in the 30s for the workers of a military plant that produced naval armament.
Every country has its fair share of folktales and legends with Spain certainly not being the exception. Andalucía in particular, which has a rich history, has some mysterious, spooky and scary stories
Rotterdam Photo is an annual photo fair with a festival flair. Taking place during Art Rotterdam Week, this event gives to art lovers have the opportunity to visit numerous art and design events.
In this project I explore the complexity and sense of self, focusing on being in liminal space. Liminal space understood as an inner state of unease where identity, dreams, affiliations and memories are being transformed.
These photographs are part of a larger series documenting the elephants of Tsavo and the work of Tsavo Trust. The full series is published in a new book titled “Land of Giants”.
Views From Ex-Patria, Series: Photographing The Unphotographable, concerns global trends of migration and the complex politics of border assertion and control.
I think the search for beauty in photography as well as in all arts is a very valid occupation. I‘m even old fashioned enough to believe that beauty has to be the aim of art, because beauty is as much an aspect of truth as wisdom is.
One day I found a box in the closet, forgotten by everyone, with my father's photo film archive in it – and from that moment my dialogue with the one who is no longer there began.
These images aim to capture the vibrant spirit of the Cuban people. While many of them face numerous hardships on a daily basis, including finding food to put on their tables, they are a kind, generous and resilient people.
My grades in school were always D’s and F’s. Mostly because I didn’t go to classes that bored me. I would go to the library and read instead. I was a voracious reader, and I credit that with my survival into adulthood.
I am passionate about photography and art in general since I was a child. Every time I had the opportunity to go to a new place like a school trip or with my parents, I took my small camera, and I captured everything.
When everything falls silent and the world feels distant and its noise fails to drown out the quiet voice coming from within, anxiety creates a space for dialogue with our own mortality and with the knowledge that everything that is, will ultimately one day be gone.
If you drive south from Los Angeles on Interstate CA-111 along the eastern shore of the Salton Sea, past Bombay Beach, Frink, Wister, Mundo, and around the migrating geyser, you’ll reach Niland, one of the poorest counties in California.
Since a young woman I have been documenting myself through self-portraiture. It wasn’t just showing myself – it was knowing and self-discovery - an interaction between me and myself.
The quarrymen was selected and published in our print edition 17. Driving a country road in Orivesi...some of my best stories start that way. Nearly every summer we spend time in Orivesi, in the southern part of Finland.
Conversations with Myself was selected and published in our print edition 17. This work represents a coalescence, of becoming. In looking at myself channel my mother, and every woman who came before me.
Bright shadows was selected and published in our print edition 17. Andreas Theologitis presents his new photographic creation. He tries to take his work one step further while remaining true to the fundamental principle he has been following insistently over the recent years: The exploration of the various aspects of the naked human body.
They look beautiful, gracious and sometimes mysterious! They are lonely cottages carrying a bag full of stories! I first met them in India, my own country.
Coney Island was shuttered and deserted. The Atlantic was frothing angrily, beating the shoreline and throwing walls of stinging spray at the beach and boardwalk, as if trying to topple the old Parachute Drop, standing watch over the Riegellman Boardwalk.
When you're ready to purchase a new camera, it can be hard to know which one is the best choice. There are so many options out there, and they all have their own features that set them apart from other models.
Dunescapes by Mohammed Arfan Asif’s project was selected and published in our print edition 17. Dunescapes is an ongoing project for more than a quarter of a century in an expanse called, The Empty Quarter in the United Arab Emirates
I was diagnosed positive with Covid 19 along with symptoms of headache, complete loss of smell, coughing and a lot of tiredness on May 2nd 2021. Life changed somewhat and I shifted myself to an isolated stay in the apartment in Newtown, Kolkata.
I was once asked by a fashion magazine to shoot a men’s fashion story. It was going to feature suits. Before the words even left their mouths, I knew exactly where I wanted to shoot it.
Dodho Magazine partnered with GuruShots "The Worlds Greatest Photo Game" in a photo challenge contest titled "Mostly White" Over 100,000 photos were submitted and more than 45 million votes were cast!
I had always been interested in visiting Brazil, but everything I had ever read about the place would be enough to scare anyone away. Swarms of children attacking tourists on the beach, the extreme poverty, hordes of pickpockets and never-ending stories of street gangs, made me wary.
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