I’m a Portuguese photographer living in Lisbon and began my photography journey 4 years ago the moment I started to bike to work. The bicycle gave me the freedom and time to explore and see things in a different way. Since then I’ve never stopped photographing and trying different things. I’m always looking for light and shadows interacting with people and the way it changes the environment during the day.
Category: Photographers
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Sergio Kaufmann
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Thomas Hackenberg
It all started with that magic B/W masterpiece by Henri Cartier-Bresson, a photograph which I saw as a photographic beginner in a book in the early 1980s and which accompanied me through my whole life, giving this initial spark to my interest for showing people in the public realm. The black-and-white picture of a small boy, carrying home two huge wine bottles with an expression of pride and joy on his face. When I saw this picture, it struck me like lightning: How on earth could a photographer be there, see and catch such an intimate, candid moment? What he said to be The Decisive Moment. With the equipment available at that time. This was THE picture for me which changed everything, motivating me to go out and try to find great pictures around the next corner, never knowing what awaits me and what life has in store for me. After all, it’s all about curiosity.
As a teenager, I had a subscription of German GEO magazine, showing, among other things, the pictures taken by the famous German photojournalist Thomas Hoepker at regular intervals. These pictures also had a key influence on me. Although they were published in a documentary and journalistic context, they showed life on the streets of the world – street photography in the truest sense of the word –, whether in the German Democratic Republic of that time, New York, or Beijing. These were pictures which burned themselves into my memory and which I never forgot since then, providing me with internally memorized guardrails for my own photographic passion.
After a longer break dedicated to my professional career in the language industry, I had more time to spend on photography again about ten years ago and never stopped going out on the streets since then. My biggest influences today comes from names like Martin Parr, Matt Stuart, Nick Turpin, Dougie Wallace, Fred Herzog or Tony Ray-Jones, just to name a few. I also do love the work of the contemporary photographers represented by collectives such as iN-PUBLIC, UP Photographers, OBSERVE, Little Box or The German Street Photography Site.
What is more, I am a keen collector of photobooks. For me, it is important to explore the work from as many different photographers as possible, seeing and understand their approaches and photographic languages, which helped me to find my own way and decide which of my own photos are good or not so good, something which I still find hard to tell sometimes. Finally, I am a music enthusiast and couldn’t live without it. Music also has a big influence on my photographic language.Two of my pictures were Finalists in the 2017 edition of STREETFOTO SAN FRANCISCO and the SIENA INTERNATIONAL PHOTO AWARDS (SIPA) 2020.
[thb_button_text link=”url:%20https%3A%2F%2Fwww.hackenberg.info%2F|title:Thomas%20Hackenberg%20Website|target:%20_blank|”][thb_button_text link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Fthomas_hackenberg_photo%2F|title:Thomas%20Hackenberg%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|”]About The Collection
My collection shows typical examples of my photographic work in public places. I see myself as a flaneur, an observer, trying to see things that others might not see, to make something out of nothing, find something special in the ordinary. All of my photos were taken candidly; nothing is staged or manipulated. Technology is not so important for me, after all, it’s the eye that decides and finds the picture. I shoot RAW and apply modest postprocessing. The major part of my photos shows people, which is an important element for me. From time to time, I find a street still-life or try to combine different layers in a minimal composition. I like ordinary street scenes, often waiting until all the elements come together, often revisiting places, often returning home with nothing.
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Bunty Gandhi
Myself Bunty Gandhi. I live in Navsari which is a small city of Gujarat. Photography for me started out of some life changing setbacks in 2017. Initially, for a few months, I was shooting whatever I came across, but slowly I developed interest in street photography… but I was still far away from what you called real street! It’s later in end of 2018, I understood what street photography actually is.
As a street photographer, I try to bring echoes and feelings places in contrasts to my pictures. I don’t have specific collection. I shoot anything which I find interesting and which connect to me. But, it’s real hard to shoot streets here in small city with many limitations so I keep changing my ideas and perspective to get most out of it.[thb_button_text link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Fbuntygandhi_|title:Bunty%20Gandhi%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|”] -

Sudeep Lal
My name is Sudeep Lal. I’m based in New Delhi, India. I’m a self taught serious amateur. I started dabbling with photography sometime around 2014. Initially it was lot of travel and random photography. In the year2015 I was introduced to the genre of ‘Street Photography’ and the works of the great masters. I was immediately drawn to the genre and since then have settled down with Street photography. I predominately shoot in colour and the likes of Alex Webb, David Alan Harvey, Harry Gruyaert and Raghubir Singh have greatly inspired my work.
[thb_button_text link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Fred_stories|title:Sudeep%20Lal%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|”]About The Collection
I have always been intrigued by the drama which quietly unfolds around us in our daily lives. It is exciting to walk the street not knowing what unexpected encounters await you just around the bend. This is an attempt to steal such moments and record it before it fades away into obscurity.
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Juan Galan
I am a Spanish street and documentary photographer currently based in Bari, Italy. I attended photography classes independently at the Faculty of Fine Arts in Salamanca, as well as film photography at the University of New York, while finishing a degree in psychology. Recently, I started to document the lifestyle of the local people in Southern Italy, with a strong focus on composition, contrast, subjectivity, and people’s expressions.
[thb_button_text link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fjuangalanphoto.com%2F|title:Juan%20Galan%20%20Website|target:%20_blank|”][thb_button_text link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Fjuangalan%2F|title:Juan%20Galan%20%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|”]About The Collection
Eat, Pray, and Love
There is something about the Mediterranean cultures that has always fascinated me, whether it is Spain, Portugal, Greece, Turkey, or Italy. There is a simplicity in the lifestyle, the enormous cultural diversity in their history, the optimism of their people, the enjoyment of contemplation, the family values and the closeness, the philosophical and humanistic approach of their societies.
Eat, Pray and Love is the title of a movie, but in southern Italy —in the Puglia region to be precise— seems to be emblematic of its cultural identity. Eat a good plate of local cuisine, Pray on Sundays, and Love surrounded by romantic spots. One might say that the Italians keep this territory a secret because of its authenticity. It ranges from the countryside to the sea, from the sandy beaches of the Ionian Sea to the rugged coast of the Adriatic, where the octopus is enjoyed raw and fresh fish is served without dressing.
This photo-essay addresses the core values of people from Puglia. It is an approach of their life-style, traditions, social life, neighborhood business, close relationships, etc. A set of values that shake your spirit to make you live passionately and humanly, very distinguish within Mediterranean cultures, where luxury is the simplicity of everyday life. -

Charalampos Kydonakis
Charalampos Kydonakis, architect from Crete, editor of the ‘dirty blog‘ , member of UP collective. Published monographs :
Warn’d in Vain / An Argonautica NYC tale
Back To Nowhere / A Minotaur inspired tale from Crete[thb_button_text link=”url:http%3A%2F%2Fdirtyharrry.com|title:Charalampos%20Kydonakis%20Website|target:%20_blank|”][thb_button_text link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Fdirtyharrrry%2F|title:Charalampos%20Kydonakis%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|”]About The Collection
B-sides from ‘Warn’d in Vain‘ ; an Argonautica inspired New York City story; a stranger’s questionmark inside the world’s most photographed city; made between the years 2014-2017 that I spent 7 months on the other side of the ocean. ‘Warn’d in Vain‘ is a parallel tale with ‘Back to Nowhere‘ is a Minotaur inspired story from my island, Crete, the only place i’ll never have the chance to see how it looks in the eyes of a stranger. (2009 – 2017).
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Victor Cambet
My name is Victor Cambet, I am 25 years old, I am a graphic designer. I was born in France, in Lyon and I have now lived in Montreal for more than 3 years. I am passionate about street photography that I practice every day!
[thb_button_text link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Fvictorcambet%2F|title:Victor%20Cambet%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|”]About The Collection
Capturing moments of fleeting life is my way of documenting our ever-changing daily life. My approach in a society saturated with image where perfection has become codified, is to highlight the true beauty of the human being, that which we come across everyday but that we no longer notice. I always try to isolate only one person in my photos to give an aspect of solitude facing the city.
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Stefano Carotenuto
Born in ’84 in sunny Napoli, Italy. I love being on the streets looking for interesting characters, ambiguous situations, paradoxes, juxtapositions and so on. Walking and watching and shooting pictures has turned into an amazing hobby. They call it street photography, at any rate, it became the right “therapy” to feel better about myself and the others and to make sense of things.
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Nicolas Petit
Born in Brussels in 1973, Nicolas is an agronomist by training. He then studied Development and Swahili at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London and has over twenty years of experience working for international organisations and NGOs. He has documented issues of rural poverty and agricultural sustainability in Ethiopia, Uzbekistan, Mongolia or West Africa. A focus on human development informs his unique photographic perspective.
In 2014, he embarked on a one-year overland journey from Brussels to Hong Kong and photography quickly became his medium of choice for documenting stories from the road.
Nicolas has been documenting urban life in Hong Kong since 2015. His candid street scenes have been published in various magazines, exhibited and featured online by a range of street photography collective or competition.
In Hong Kong, he had the opportunity to attend two Magnum Workshops to continue developing his vision, with Richard Kalvar as well as Alex and Rebecca Webb. He was one of the series finalists in the 2019 Brussels Street Photography Festival and he is currently finalising his first street photography book project on Hong Kong entitled A Goldfish Dream.
He is currently working as freelance photographer and consulting at the same time for the United Nations Development Programme on Agriculture sustainability globally.[thb_button_text link=”url:http%3A%2F%2Fwww.nicolaspetitphotography.com|title:Nicolas%20Petit%20Website|target:%20_blank|”][thb_button_text link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Fthehongkongers|title:Nicolas%20Petit%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|”] -

Manuel Pena
My name is Manuel Pena and I’m a self-taught photographer from New York. I developed my passion for photography in 2015. Since then I moved to capturing everyday moments in the streets of New York. My goal is to tell stories using light, shadow, composition and color. I only have one rule: Shoot anything that interests you and the pieces will fall in place.
[thb_button_text link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.mannydevelops.com%2F|title:Manuel%20Pena%20Website|target:%20_blank|”][thb_button_text link=”url:%20https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Fmanolobrown%2F|title:Manuel%20Pena%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|”]About The Collection
Beauty in the mundane
I don’t have a specific goal when I go out on my daily travels. It seems anything can be beautiful. You just have to be open in seeing and knowing when it’s there. I have to admit being a photographer in NYC can be unfair at times. I don’t have to look too hard as there are always things going on around me. These photos represent what New York is through my eyes. Enjoy! -

Suresh Naganathan
Born in Switzerland in 1980, I moved back to India, my parents’ country of origin, in 2008. Overwhelmed by the sounds, colors, and overbearing human presence in this new environment after 28 years in calm Switzerland, I picked up the camera in order to make sense of all the chaos surrounding me.
After a few years of random snapshots, I came across the genre of street photography in 2014.
It was a revelation! This encounter opened my eyes to the endless possibilities the art of candid photography has to offer. From that moment, there was no turning back. My passion turned into an obsession, a quest to find the special moments that people so easily miss.
Over the last few years, I have been exploring the streets of the world. Wherever I go, the camera is an integral part of me, in my search for that “something” unique and quirky that only I can see. This is as much an exploration of the world around me as it is of my own self.[thb_button_text link=”url:http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sureshn.com|title:Suresh%20Naganathan%20Website|target:%20_blank|”][thb_button_text link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Fsureshnaganathan|title:www.sureshn.com%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|”]About The Collection
This set of images is part of a long-term project about Mumbai, the city I have been calling home for the last 12 years. Mumbai is one of the most diverse places I have encountered both in terms of culture as well as urban landscapes. I aim to give people a sense of this place through my photography and hope to turn these images into a book someday.
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Julia Coddington
Julia Coddington is a street photographer from Australia. She is co-founder of the Australian based Unexposed Collective, for women, non binary and intersex street photographers and an administrator of @womeninstreet, a growing international community of women street photographers. Julia is a member of the Little Box Collective.
[thb_button_text link=”url:http%3A%2F%2Fwww.juliacoddington.com|title:Julia%20Coddington%20Website|target:%20_blank|”][thb_button_text link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Fjuliacoddington|title:Julia%20Coddington%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|”]About The Collection
Losing myself in a scene and becoming at one with a scene and then the image, gives me a sense of achievement and is the reason I continue to go out and photograph. This collection includes images that have a sense of intimacy and closeness and where I feel I am part of that scene and within the image itself.















































































































































































































































