Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Tom Chambers
Friday, December 4, 2009
Sam Abell
Though he has an old time feeling he still knows how to shoot his subjects very well. He has a great eye for composition and brings out the more dull colors found in the world now a days. I find it very interesting how he can take something that is very bland and make it into a beautiful photograph. He shows the beautiful light within everything.
Chris Donahue
Thursday, December 3, 2009
Johan and Johanna
I found out about Johan and Johanna by searching various photographers on an agency website. Johan has a deep passion for shooting houses, he feels that homes have more soul than actual people. Johanna grew up wanting to get into fashion photography and eventually did jobs for H and M, Diesel, etc. Together they photograph landscape, architecture and people. I really enjoy the photographs that are taken at night and the surroundings are lit up by artificial lighting, either coming from the street lights or the lights inside the homes. I think these two create beautiful images together and they have real talent. A lot of their photos use soft colors, while a few are very saturated like some of the landscape. I like the variety in their work.
Posted by Ashley Finkney
http://www.skarp.se/show_images.php?client_id=81
Jeremey Cowart
Jeremey Cowart is from Nashville, TN. In 2005, Jeremey Cowart switched from graphic design to do photography full-time. He has released a photography book. He has entertainment clients such as FOX, A&E, ABC, E!, Capitol Records, and many more. He shoots many celebrities and musicians. What caught my eye about Jeremey's work was an series called Atmosphere (I couldn't get any of the pictures). The photographs in the series are mostly soft and his compositions are very interesting. All of his photographs seem very personal, like they are the created for the viewer. With the soft colors, interesting compositions, and cool surroundings, the pictures drew me in.
www.jeremeycowart.com
Stephanie Aldrich
Natalie Krick
About her current work, Ambiguity and the Masquerade, Natalie said, "In my recent body of work, I examine the ways photography contributes to the construction of identity and gender. Women are encouraged to create a socially acceptable feminine appearance. I want to explore how this construction of sexual identity influences gender roles and sexual stereotypes. The women I photograph are dressed in excessive costumes to emphasize the artfice of femininity. I am interested in how transforming a woman into an exaggerated cliche of femininity results in her gender becoming ambiguous."
Her work has a blown out, flash bulb appearance, which I find to be truly beautiful. It has a fashion forward look, both in the lighting style and in the appearance and dress of her models. The colors are vivid against the bright whites, yet seemingly somewhat de saturated at the same time due to the bright flash. The high contrast of the photographs also help to give the photos a fashion photography feel. Although these photographs are posed, they are posed in a very natural way, capturing raw human emotion and natural actions.
Mikhael Subotzky
Mikhael Subotzky was born in 1981 in Cape Town, South Africa, and is currently based in Johannesburg.
His most recent body of work, Beaufort West, has been published in book form by Chris Boot Publishers and was the subject of the 2008 exhibition New Photography: Josephine Meckseper and Mikhael Subotzky at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
Subotzky’s work has been exhibited widely in major galleries and museums, and his prints are in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, the South African National Gallery, Cape Town, the Johannesburg Art Gallery, and FOAM (FotoMuseum Amsterdam).
Recent awards and grants include the Oskar Barnack Award, the Lou Stouman Award, the W. Eugene Smith Memorial Grant, the ICP Infinity Award (Young Photographer), the KLM Paul Huf Award, and the Special Jurors Award at the 2005 VIes Recontres Africaines de la Photographie in Bamako.
He works as a photojournalist. The history of documentary photography plays a decisive role in Mikhael Subotzky’s work. At an early age, the artist was exposed to the activist work of his uncle, Gideon Mendel, one of South Africa’s notable “struggle photographers,” and he grew up in a milieu of commitment to social democracy.
But the images he took of prisoners started out as his senior project at his university.