I am Georgie. I am a self-taught photographer based in London and I am a mother to three boys. I’ve had a sincere passion for music and photography from an early age. I have a rather wonderful ability to memorise lyrics and since starting my instagram account in early 2019 I have managed to bring together my two passions.
I’ve found an outlet for channelling my thoughts and expressing myself. I often search for an image that would fit a particular favourite lyric or vice versa. I might take an image and find a fitting lyric to turn it into a story or perhaps just an emotion. I can only hope my images translate to my audience in a way that they are left feeling moved in one way or another.
Category: Photographers
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Georgina Peel
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Piti Amraranga
Piti Amraranga
Born 1980, Based in Bangkok THAILAND. Graduated in graphic design, working on product design and interested in street photography.
“Besides the advertising and movie industry, one Thai street photographer is also a designer.
‘Piti Amraranga’ He opens a furniture design company named o-d-a. Many awarded winning products made from wood.
His career has quite affected his photo. He changes everything into the simplicity of graphics.
It looks charming and can be watched again and again. Compare to a furniture,
his photo is a favorite one that shows in a living room and it’s never outdated.” – Tavepong Pratoomwong –Awards
2nd Place of 2019 ‘Brussels Street Photo Festival‘ Series Contest
3rd Place of 2019 ‘Streetfoto San Francisco’ Series Contest
3rd Place of 2019 The 7th Chang International Fine Art Photo Contest
Finalist of 2020 ‘Italian Street Photo Festival’ Series Contest
Finalist of 2019 ‘Streetfoto San Francisco’ Singles Contest
Finalist of 2018 – 2019 ‘Miami Street Photography Festival’ Singles Contest
Finalist of 2018 – 2019 ‘Italian Street Photo Festival’ Singles Contest
Finalist of 2018 ‘LACP‘ Street Shooting Around the World[thb_button_text link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Fpiti_dui_photo%2F|title:Piti%20Amraranga%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|”]About The Collection
Adaptation
The “Adaptation” series present harmonious relationship between the object and its surroundings. There are the things that we have witnessed everyday without recognizing its beautiful harmony. Once we find its balanced convergence, we will notice such naturally-emerging sight. -

Raffaele De Vivo
Raffaele De Vivo (aka Rufio) is an Italian street photographer, currently based in Brooklyn, New York City. His journey with photography began at a young age. He studied photography at Istituto Statale d’Arte and proceeded with undergraduate studies at Accademia di Belle Arti in Naples, Italy.
Along the way, his photographic interests became more clear and he turned his eye to the streets – places full of color and lights, but also dark and shadows.
His works were selected to be part of photography exhibition in the United States, France, Italy, Germany and Hungary.[thb_button_text link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Fraffaelerufiodevivo%2F|title:Raffaele%20De%20Vivo%20%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|”]About The Collection
NEW YORK CITY STREETS.
New York City amazes me – a melting pot where, despite the mixture of lives and cultures, people preserve their own individuality. Those single identities I like to observe and catch trough my camera.In these photographs the juxtaposition of elements combines with vivid colors and the high contrast of lights and shadows to convert ordinary moments of life into surrealistic scenes. -

Andrea Pozzoni
I was born in 1981 in Italy (Sondrio) My approach to street photography, with all its nuances, is quite recent. I used to photograph people, now I photograph the particular context and the individual person is an element that often undergoes the context itself. My small home town is the main place where I take pictures. l look for plays of light and geometric shadows and shades, where diagonals are often the predominant element. What I seek in my photography is geometry, isolation, coincidences and strong contrast between color and negative space .
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Thanasorn Janekankit
Thanasorn Janekankit is usually known to everyone as “Rab Thanasorn”. He was born in Thailand. He has been working in an advertising agency in Bangkok, Thailand for more than 10 years. He is ranked Top 14 creative in Asia. Rab also applies his perception from his work to create his own street photography’s style.Now, he’s one of The New Wave Thai Street Photographers, ranked by famous street photographer, Artyt Lerdrakmongkol, and many international street photography’s blogs.
His work has been selected for show in several countries, International Photography festival, Photography Blogs including Miami Street Photography Festival, Italian Street Photo Festival, StreetFoto San Francisco, Brussels Street Photography Festival and many more. He won awards from OPPO Creators Awards 2019 (1st Prize) and Sony World Photography Award 2018 (National Award-2nd).
He is one of the members of “Street Photo Thailand” the biggest street photographer collective in Thailand.And he became a member of “Little Box Collective” the international collective that gathered the diverse styles of street photographers from different regions around the world.[thb_button_text link=”url:http%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Frabthanasorn|title:Thanasorn%20Janekankit%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|”] -

Artem Zhitenev
Artem was born in 1968 in Moscow. He started shooting in 1977, and got into photography as a professional in 1988. Since 1996 Artem Zhitenev works with newspapers and magazines. Lives in Moscow, Russia.
A member of International Federation of Journalists.[thb_button_text link=”url:http%3A%2F%2Fartemzhitenev.com|title:Artem%20Zhitenev%20Website|target:%20_blank|”][thb_button_text link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Fartemzhitenev%2F|title:Artem%20Zhitenev%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|”] -

Jasper Tejano
Jasper Tejano is a calm and collected street photographer who has built a name for himself in street photography and whose works have been recognized and featured by various local and international publications both online and in print. Through his street photography, he has collaborated with international private groups and non-profit organizations from Brazil, France, Greece, Ireland and New York, USA on distributing his works. His street photographs have been showcased in the global exhibit scene from Manila to Miami, Paris, Milan and other countries.
His street photography started as a result of reaching a plateau in his creative growth. After exploring various genres in photography, he discovered the works of Magnum photographers Henri Cartier-Bresson, Alex Webb, David Alan Harvey and Harry Gruyaert. Their style of documenting the world blew him away. These photographers became his most important influence. In 2012, in part thanks to their inspiration, he started seeing the world through a different lens. Since then, street photography has become his genre of choice.
When he is not out there practicing street photography, he is wearing his corporate HR hat or doting on his son giving the little tyke basics on photography or simply enjoying his cup of coffee with his wife and creative partner, with his camera in tow just in case. He is a university graduate with a degree in Psychology.[thb_button_text link=”url:http%3A%2F%2Fjaspertejano.onuniverse.com|title:Jasper%20Tejano%20Website|target:%20_blank|”][thb_button_text link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Fjaspertejano|title:Jasper%20Tejano%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|”]About The Collection
- This image was made during the rainy season in my country. The indoor skating rink has always provided a good place to make photographic studies. In one of my visits, I saw a young boy practicing his stunts and was observing him from a frosted plexiglass. This was one of his jump stunts where he landed successfully. Pasay, Philippines 2015
- This image was made as a result of challenging myself to look at the usual subjects from an unusual vantage. Here, I was always tempted to photograph the children enjoying this motorized group swing from the front facing them. By dropping that convention, I went around and I had a good look at their feet from behind the swing and by instinct felt that it was that moment, from that vantage that the image made more sense to me. Bay Area, Pasay Philippines 2016
- A scene of art admirers at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston. Boston, Mass 2019
- A reflection of a mall visitor. Pasay, Philippines 2019
- A silhouette of a boy through a glass wall of an office building. Taguig, Philippines 2018
- A woman in her coat on her way home after a night of partying. Hong Kong 2014
- A tired local tourist being photographer by her companion while resting. Hong Kong 2014
- A tourist being photographed by her companion while grabbing the testicles of the famous Merrrill Llynch Bull. New York 2019
- A silhouette of a boy appears to be kissing a smaller silhouette of a man in a forced perspective. Bay Area, Pasay Philippines 2015
- A striding lady photographed between two old payphones. Kuala Lumpur 2015
- Surfing lesson by the shore. Baler, Aurora Philippines 2018
- A lady admiring an outdoor art exhibit. Ayala, Makati Philippines 2018
- A kid inside an ice skating rink. Ortigas, Pasig Philippines 2018
- The business district of Hong Kong has always provided me with with interesting backdrops. In this image, I was able to photograph a young man in a crisp suit probably walking on his way to an after office get together, a dinner or maybe to his apartment. Hong Kong 2014
- Fans take their selfie with the life-sized posters of their boy band idols inside a record store in Shibuya. Tokyo 2018
- In this image, when I was standing across the street, I noticed that a woman in her overcoat was in deep contemplation. When it was our time to cross the street, I made a couple of frames of her in silhouette. Until now I’m still intrigued on what she was thinking especially in this particular moment when I made the shot. Pasay, Philippines 2014\
- A group of beach goers framed by the legs of a boy on a bicycle. Baler, Aurora Philippines 2018
- Long shadows of people photographed during the longest day of the year. Pasay Philippines 2014
- A tourist photographed with the architecture of the Oculus as backdrop. New Work 2019
- A man enjoying his smoking break. Pasay Philippines 2014
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Assaf Gavra
If you want to catch beasts you don’t see every day,
You have to go places quite out of the way,
You have to go places no others can get to.
You have to get cold and you have to get wet, too. – Dr.SeussWe don’t see things as they are, we see things as we are. – Anaïs Nin
My art is a journey of self-discovery and self-expression. In general, I love photography, from any kind. I always try to express myself with many different photos as I can, my goal isn’t being identified with an art type, but to be identified with successes to bring out the beauty from any place / person, into the eyes and therefor into viewer’s heart.
I am fascinated by just being able to sit beside the street and watch people pass by, I’m always seeking their facial expressions and, by that, trying to understand what they have been through, try to peal their mask and reveal their soul. I believe that life in progress educates us to hide our true feelings, but it’s inevitable that for a fraction of time we forget about everything and therefor expose our true unmasked mood, and this is exactly where and when I want to be, catch this pure moment of joy, anger, sadness, excitement, just from this reason only I love to take photos, especially my own two daughters which, like any other kids, didn’t learn yet how to camouflage their true inner feeling and almost every second express their true feelings. My experiences are both source of pain and joy, my source of inquiry and inspiration. They are what I tap into when creating my art.
As a fine art photographer I have often pondered what makes someone buy a piece of art to hang on their wall and look at it every day for years on end. Then I realized that there must be a connection between the moment I took this photo and the moment the person decides to take it into the most intimate place and watch it every day from now on. I want to be able to serve those moments into people’s home to be part of their personality and this aspires me to create meaningful work and sharpen my creative vision.
Therefore, I don’t believe that the “quality” of the photo is relevant since, whether it is bad, good or great, one’s opinion on what makes a great image is not only endlessly debatable but very personal. What seems to be more is relevant than the subjective quality of an image is how personally compelling that image is to someone and how that image triggers emotions in the viewer. The more “successful” (i.e. popular) the image, the more it resonates with the collective memory, acting as an emotional Rorschach test that triggers many similar universal feelings in different people.
Originally, I started taking photos as a freediving instructor. I needed to show my students how they act underwater and help them improve their technique. Then I started to move the camera from only technical aspect into emotional too, where I can seek both free divers and other wildlife feelings, I felt a burning and desire to capture the beautiful moments I experienced. And once again the act of photographing is not just as my duties as freediving instructor but also increased my joy. Then the camera eventually and naturally went out of the water and uses almost every day since (I always carry my camera with me) as a bridge toward people, animals and places I met and traveled to, eventually my photo archive became my personal diary.
My art has since been published on the web, galleries, books, magazines and Television. I’m proud to have costumers from all over the world which bought my art both as hard copies to hang it on their home or office walls and digital copies for their web sites brochures and catalogs.
I am always concerned with the “decisive moment” and have made a concerted effort to make sure nothing gets in the way of that. Every tool I use to create my work is geared towards my philosophy of capturing that moment from my experiences. To capture animal’s feelings, I use a heavy and high quality equipment (Canon). In crowded places taking street / candid photos where you have to be much stealthier, flexible and responsive, then I use my smaller Leica’s, both equipped with color and B&W sensors. (meaning I don’t convert colored photos into Black and white ones, I just captured them in the way I want to provide it to the viewer).Finally, after memorizing the leading quotes in this statement again and again, I can’t summarize and describe myself other than being a traveler, a gatherer of moments and feelings, a truly soul seeker. that leaves me with the big unsolved question. What is the reason I taking photos with such passion ? maybe because I just can’t do otherwise.
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Carlos Antonorsi
Born in Caracas, Venezuela of Corsican and British descent, I have always considered myself a citizen of the world. At 16 years of age I made my way to Vancouver Island, Canada for college, then to England for university; ended up in Greece for 17 years, and for the last few years I have found myself living in Miami, USA. Having been born with what feels like ten thumbs for fingers, photography has become the means to express my artistic stirrings; with light and colors as my canvas, I attempt to paint that breath of time which will never again be.
[thb_button_text link=”url:http%3A%2F%2Fwww.CarlosAntonorsi.com|title:Carlos%20Antonorsi%20Website|target:%20_blank|”][thb_button_text link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Fc.antonorsi%2F|title:Carlos%20Antonorsi%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|”]About The Collection
Miami’s Palette
Street photography has been my passion for the last few years, light and shadows intrigue me; Miami and its colors have definitely influenced what I see through the lens…here I try to show a personal perception of my ‘City of Light’. -

Alan Burles
Alan Burles
I was an advertising art director but I have now turned to photography and since my early twenties I have carried a camera everywhere I go.
Being in advertising had an extraordinary influence on me because I was fortunate enough to work at Saatchi & Saatchi in London
which created a vibrant and extraordinary environment in which so many people could flourish.
It also taught me the power of simplicity and the power of the idea – plus the importance of striving for a point of difference to the trends of the times. My philosophy is to live my life and let photographs come to me, in other words to live in openness.
My photographs were reviewed in a magazine in China recently and I got the Mandarin text translated.
The reviewer said: ‘Sometimes it needs you to just enjoy his work, sometimes it requires your eyes to listen to the jokes it’s telling you.’
I thought that was delightful and now call the way I photograph Listening With My Eyes.[thb_button_text link=”url:http%3A%2F%2Fwww.alanburles.com|title:Alan%20Burles%20Website|target:%20_blank|”][thb_button_text link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Falanburles%2F|title:Alan%20Burles%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|”] -

Giannis Angelakis
Giannis Angelakis is from Chania. He was born in 1979 and has lived most of his life at Chania. He spent some years in England where he did a degree at Cultural and Media Studies at the University of Wolverhampton (BSc) and studied at the Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies and Sociology at the University of Birmingham. From a very young age he works as a journalist and for the past years he is an official “Fuji-X Photographer”. His work is mainly focused on daily life at the island of Crete as well as covering news stories.
[thb_button_text link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Fangelakis_gianis%2F|title:Giannis%20Angelakis%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|”]About The Collection
Chania, beyond the tourist fantasy
Crete, in the years of the financial crisis of 2008 became even more depended on the tourism industry. Everything seemed to evolve around tourism because this was the only “industry” that was making money at a time where salaries were collapsing and unemployment was going to the roof. One side effect of this huge dependence of economy from tourism was that life in Chania was somehow reduced to an image that fits the idea of a touristic destination. People in Crete, according to the dominant narrative, are always smiling, dancing, drinking raki and playing music, enjoying the sun and having fun. Positive stereotypes can become negative when seen from another prism and stereotypes of the joyful native can turn into stereotypes about laziness. The constant repetition of similar images of picturesque sunny beaches, glorious sunsets and almost caricaturist portraits of “indigenous people” imprints in the minds of visitors that this is really Crete. It casts a shadow to everything else that doesn’t serve the dominant narrative and forces people to comply and adjust to the collective fantasy that move the wheels of economy. In a global level, people are more and more location independent. Just before the coronavirus epidemic, we lived in a time of constant travel and flexibility. Travel is not anymore a matter of having a vacation but is more and more becoming a matter of status. New technologies and social media created a market for the abundance of material created, which is dominated by images of places that should be in a “bucket list”. This was a reality that the dominant division was between those “independent” and able to travel who could reach a higher level of consciousness which surpassed national or local boundaries towards an identity of a cosmopolitan citizen and the natives, those who are bound to a place, who can’t work from a distance, who belong in communities and depend from them. My effort is to bring back to the surface some of the richness of life that does not fit the dominant narrative of what a travel destination is.
Here, you will find a combination of photos from everyday life in the town of Chania. It is a peculiar mixture of pictures which seem disconnected but I perceive that they somehow capture the complexity of living in a place like Chania from a quite dark perspective. -

Giedo van der Zwan
Giedo van der Zwan
I was born in Amsterdam, The Netherlands in September 1967.
Photography has been a part of who I am and the way I see the world since the age of 12.
I rediscovered photography in 2017 as my focus shifted to the street and I completely rediscovered my approach to photography.
In a much simpler and straightforward way, using my mind to pre-vision and getting rid of excess gear.
With just one camera/lens (Leica Q) and a flash I started to rediscover my world.
Working mostly from home and shooting daily life at the seaside close to where I live.
I also like to travel specifically for photography and preferably with fellow street photographers.
In the last 3 years I have met many of them all over the world and I’m planning to keep doing so for as long as I can.
In 2017 I also started my long-term project ‘Pier to Pier’ which is about the 2.5 km of beach
and boulevard in Scheveningen between the two main Piers.
In 2018 I published my first photobook under that name and my first solo exhibition,
which was outside on the Pier for 6 months, and has been visited by more than 200,000 people.
In the last 2 years I have been so lucky to be awarded by several international street photo festivals and platforms,
such as from Brussels, Miami, Paris, Trieste, Milan, Poland, Lensculture and Life Framer.
My work has been published by many different photo magazines and national newspapers online and in print.
This year my work from Scheveningen is being exhibited by Museum Panorama Mesdag in The Hague in an exhibition that I have been working on for the last two years together with three other photographers under the title ‘Candid’.[thb_button_text link=”url:http%3A%2F%2Fwww.giedovanderzwan.com|title:Giedo%20van%20der%20Zwan%20Website|target:%20_blank|”][thb_button_text link=”url:http%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Fgiedovanderzwan|title:Giedo%20van%20der%20Zwan%20Instagram|target:%20_blank|”]About The Collection
This selection is a mix from my local work and the work I made during travels over the last 3 years.
Inspired by many photographers I developed my own style. This can best be observed in my local work where I prefer to get as close to the seaside visitors as possible, while also aiming to photograph them candidly and using flash to bring out every detail.
I use different approaches depending on the situation and on my mood.
Sometimes I mingle with the beach goers and wait for them to get used to my presence and camera.
At other moments,I concentrate on a composition and/or light or I feel in the mood for hunting and set my camera in fixed manual settings so I can react in an instant when I see something happening.I also like to shoot together with other photographers.
It creates a different dynamic and inspiration and I often get back home with some new keepers.
My work is characterized by bright full colours and somewhat absurd looking scenes.
I like to create a look outside which is reminiscent of a studio shoot. This is why people sometimes think that I stage my shots. But I never do!
























































































































































































































































