Amazing colorful photography by JeongMee Yoon, talented female photographer from Seoul, South Korea. The color pink represents femininity whilst blue represents masculinity, and we see the children surrounded by items that typify their gender.
Showing posts with label Colorful Photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colorful Photography. Show all posts
Saturday, October 16, 2010
Colorful Photography by JeongMee Yoon
Amazing colorful photography by JeongMee Yoon, talented female photographer from Seoul, South Korea. The color pink represents femininity whilst blue represents masculinity, and we see the children surrounded by items that typify their gender.
Friday, October 8, 2010
Photography by Martin Hultén
Martin Hultén is a photographer from Stockholm, Sweden. Hultén creates these images of people hanging around in domestic or public environments, interesting places with harsh, primary colors and is known for using bright light and a lot of flash.
Hultén creates commissioned and free work, which both have his signature style. His portraits aren’t always perfect but they’re realistic and often depict people who believe they go unnoticed. This makes his images personal and really intimate to look at. Although his images look like snapshots, Hultén is known for his dedication and concentration. He can spend days at location to capture the perfect image and the essence of the story he wants to get across.
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Light Photography by Barry Underwood
Barry Underwood's large super-saturated color prints are striking at first glance. In fact, a fiction is being created here with light, color, and framing, pulling the viewer into a new, somewhat mythical environment. Issues relating to contemporary painting and film also come into play as the artist considers illusion, imagination, and narrative, the potential of the ordinary transformed into the extraordinary through light and composition. Underwood's surreal photographs are a cross-pollination between static and performing art. The photographs suggest a happening-a secret unnatural moment in the natural world-that the artist has chanced upon and been able to record. When thinking about the genesis of these works, Underwood drew less from the realm of the fantastic and instead looked to his immediate surroundings to draw inspiration, fusing autobiography with fiction.
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