A movie about the depiction of Indians in American Cinema. It goes to show how we can be deceived by the images that we are fed. Pictures are powerful historic tools.
It’s also on Netflix. yay
A movie about the depiction of Indians in American Cinema. It goes to show how we can be deceived by the images that we are fed. Pictures are powerful historic tools.
It’s also on Netflix. yay
Aside from this being a pretty sweet collection from a person with a great understanding of light, this site of the photography of Anna Huix is a really great example of efficiency in an online identity.
Throughout the site you’ll find some professionally commissioned projects with a good balance of other personal projects. Extremely clean presentation all around..
http://www.annahuix.com/commissions/
Photographer Sacha Goldberger asks passing joggers to step into a professional lighting studio and have a photo taken. Then, they are asked to return one week later to the studio to replicated the pose and lighting f the shot, this time dressed up. The outcome is fascinating, click for more.
I just got a little bit entranced by these photos. I wish I could defy gravity like she can, using photoshop or not.
more photos here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/lissyl/
Having an obsession with rays of sunlight and shadows these days. Ties in a bit to the different types of light we’ve been talking about. I had this particular picture in mind when I took the one below on my walk to school today. (shucks didn’t realize the similarities between them until i saw them together now!!) Click the picture above to check out Christian Patterson’s work, it’s awesome!
http://www.widerange.org/gallery/
Jack Brauer has amassed a pretty impressive landscape portfolio! Throughout his collection, there are quite a few photo shoots that show the true value of shooting the same subject at different times of day/evening.
I was browsing flickr today, and noticed this artists work. I think the macro of some of her shots are amazing. The way she captures nature is very nice.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/sue_h/with/3577546046/
Henri Cartier-Bresson’s (1908–2004) “inventive work of the early 1930s helped define the creative potential of modern photography, and his uncanny ability to capture life on the run made his work synonymous with “the decisive moment”—the title of his first major book.”
MoMa has some online exhibitions of Cartier-Bresson and an interactive gallery (this one is of his USSR photos).
“Cartier-Bresson was the first Western photographer to be admitted to the Soviet Union after the death of Josef Stalin, in 1953. The pictures he made in the summer of 1954 were news in themselves, and several magazines reproduced quite a few of them. When he returned to the U.S.S.R. nearly two decades later, in 1972 and 1973, his image of Soviet life developed a new dimension—grim, barren, and bleak.”
I’ve been wanting to post about a street photographer, but wanted to find one who was more inspirational/less pretentious than The Sartorialist (pretty much the only contemporary one I’m really familiar with). So I wikipedia’d ‘street photography’ and came across this guy. He seems pretty awesome, so I plan on learning more about his work!