Tag: photography

Photography is the art, application and practice of creating durable images by recording light or other electromagnetic radiation, either electronically by means of an image sensor, or chemically by means of a light-sensitive material such as photographic film.

  • Bas Losekoot

    Bas Losekoot

    Bas Losekoot

    Bas Losekoot is an artist and photographer whose work addresses socio-cultural issues in cities around the world. He uses cinematographic apparatus and techniques to challenge the understanding of everyday urban realities, as well as the limited narrative potential of documentary photography’s representations of truth. Though his practice combines concepts of mobility, sociology and urban theory, he uses his intuition to visualise the human experience in modern megacities.

    He holds a BA in Fine Art Photography from the Royal Academy of the Arts in The Hague and an MA in Photography and Urban Cultures from Goldsmiths, University of London. He has exhibited internationally at galleries, museums and festivals, including BOZAR, Belgium; Voies-Off/Les Rencontres d’Arles, France; Jimei x Arles, China; Kaunas Photography Gallery, Lithuania, FotoIstanbul, Turkey; LagosPhoto, Nigeria; and Unseen Photo Fair, the Netherlands. A variety of international media outlets have featured his work, including The New York Times LENS Blog, The New Yorker Photo Booth, CNN Editions, The Guardian, Die Zeit, NRC Handelsblad, IMA Magazine and the British Journal of Photography.

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    About The Collection…

    Since the beginning of the Urban Millennium, we are facing the biggest wave of urbanisation in human history. In 2011, Bas Losekoot started a visual exploration on the consequences of growing population density. He selected nine fast growing megacities around the world that hold 20 million inhabitants, or will reach this number in the next couple of years. Who are these anonymous urban citizens in these cultural dynamic cities that seem to be heterogeneous? What does this excessive growth do with our sense of personal space in the public domain?

     

    The cities in which he worked are “on the move” and its inhabitants are “in transit”. This in-between-ness is representing the current urban state of mind of unfocussed attention of city dwellers. Metropolitan life over-stimulates our senses to which we react with indifference and blasé attitude. With the help of telephones, headphones and sunglasses, we detach from space and reality.

     

    The metropolis life is the modern version of the fight of the primitive man against nature. Where we normally had to run for our lives we now have to run for our jobs. We are not running for life-threatening danger but danger for exclusion. The struggle for survival remains the same.

     

    The anonymity of the man in the crowd is an important part of the metropolitan experience. There are unwritten social rules which provide each individual with a certain space and freedom, as long as we leave the others alone. Within certain boundaries, it is allowed to watch and observe, to look at something in public that is actually private.

     

    The project includes photography from the cities of New York, São Paulo, Seoul Mumbai, Hong Kong, London, Lagos, Istanbul and Mexico City. Losekoot photographed one month in each of these cities, placing flashlights in the most crowded streets of the city, creating an uncanny reality. These lights emphasise the capacity of photography to freeze movement, turning the mise-en-scène of urban dwellers into a fascinating choreography. By adding drama to the trivial, Losekoot is painting the theatre of the real life, where small gestures become dramatical events. The images show us details of everyday life that normally remain unnoticed. Like film stills, they are a fragment of a bigger picture; an extended moment out of an urban continuum.

    Key Questions:
    • The street is a pressure cooker for human expression and development, how do we cope with the amount of visual stimulations in the street?
    • Is the growth of mega cities providing a fundament for human happiness?

    Bas Losekoot Quote:
    “I always considered the street a stage where we, the actors, are performing in the decor of the city. In daily life, we are performing social roles and we wear the appropriate mask for that. While commuting the city, we drop this mask and replace it for another one, the mask of ‘self-protection’. I am interested in this mask, because I believe this it gives us a lot of information of the self and the construction of identity. On the street, it seems that  we perform ‘avoidance practice’; modern city life gets us over-stimulated, and we detach from space and reality.”

     

    Press Quotes:

    Shining a flashlight on coming and going New Yorkers, he created photographs with a heightened sense of drama that freeze moments of movement, halting the frenetic pace of New York’s commuter culture. The series also explores how, counterintuitively, the commute can be a time for introspection and psychological divorce from reality.” Ruby Goldberg / The New Yorker

     

     “Exploring the dynamics of the streets. Capturing a moment in time that you can delve into and resonate with on a very human level. Losekoot asks thoughtful questions of society by holding up a mirror and inviting honest examination.” Lyric Lewin / CNN Editions

     

    “Bas Losekoot’s ‘Urban Millennium Project’ shows us Streetphotography Reinvented”

    – Julien Bolle / Réponses Photo

     

    “Bas’ brightly lit street scene is arresting.  It’s a comment on the anonymity of an individual in our huge urban jungles. For a candid street image it’s incredibly sharp – it almost feels staged, with studio lighting rigs just out of view. It’s a mesmerising image that I enjoy both aesthetically, and through what it makes me feel about our modern world.” – Patrick di Nola / Getty Images

     

    Bas captures that decisive moment of almost-interaction in our busy urban environments, where two people almost connect, or in this case almost collide, in his own brilliantly distinctive style.” – Olivia Arthur / Magnum Photos

     

    “Evoking the spirit of Italo Calvino’s (1978) “Invisible Cities” in which cities are imagined in Marco Polo’s journeys through them, “Out of Place” probes the cities of the imagination. The cities he photographs are urban landscapes caught in the free fall of rapid change. In each place people -the architects of the individual imaginary- are photographed against the others and fragments of their city. Who knows what images and memories of the city they navigate it with? But we are invited to speculate, to stand in their place.” – Caroline Knowles / Professor of Sociology and Director of the Centre for Urban and Community Research (CUCR)

  • Sofia Sebastian

    Sofia Sebastian

    Sofia Sebastian

    I was born in Madrid but I currently lives in Washington DC. I was first introduced to photography while watching classic movies as a teenager but went on to pursue a career in international relations. Starting in 2011 I began to focus in photography as an art form, but it was only recently that I discovered my passion for street and documentary photography.

    My work has been exhibited internationally in both solo and group shows. I received the first Female in Focus Award from 1854 Media in 2019 and have been a finalist in various street photography festivals, including Street Photo Milano in the category of emerging photographer, Street Photo San Francisco, and Aussie Street 2019.

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    About The Collection…

    As someone raised in a big city, I am fascinated with the pace of everyday life. Trapped and competing for a space that I create, the characters on my stage are frequently engaged with something happening outside of the frame. There is energy but the commonality is a sense of drama, distress, and an embrace of the unknown.

    I like to experiment with different approaches. Sometimes I look for interesting light. Other times, I simply walk in search of new ideas and stories.

  • Daniele Contini

    Daniele Contini

    Daniele Contini

    Daniele Contini is an Italian street photographer living near Milano. He has been practicing street photography since few years now. He was a finalist in international street photography competitions including Miami Street Photography Festival and the Italian Street Photography Festival. Capturing the unexpected beauty is what he likes. Photography is more than just taking memories. He takes pictures when the subject makes him think of something that has a significant inner story. Outside of photography, he works in the digital industry, loves hiking in the outdoors and spending time with his family.

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  • Francesco Gioia

    Francesco Gioia

    I am a self-taught photographer born in Florence in 1991.

    I was initially employed with a photojournalism agency and curated a very rich historical archive of over three million images taken between 1944 – 1980s by founder Giulio Torrini who captured half a century of Florence’s history.

    Afterwards, in 2015, I moved to London where I currently live.

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    About The Collection

    These images are part of an ongoing project that documents my perception of the city of London.

    I mainly focus on colour, shapes and people.

  • Zeynep Ozcan

    Zeynep Ozcan

    Zeynep Ozcan

    In 1994, she started photography. She opened two solo exhibitions and participated in many group exhibitions. She made personal and mixed transparent shows. She received many awards and exhibitions at home and abroad. In 2012, she received the Golden Camera award in Turkey. She has photographs in museums and private collections.

    A photo of her was accepted at the World Cup 1997, Austrian Super Circuit World Tour competition. Her photograph was also taken by Museum of Photographic Art (MOPA) in the same year. Spain Photographic Society of Gipuzkua took one of her photos for its collection. She received the title of AFIAP in 2001 and EFIAP in 2009.

    Streets witness the most active moments in our lives. Shadows, reflections, snapshots that may be instantaneous are images that play games with us. It is a great pleasure for me to discover these …

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  • Argus Paul

    Argus Paul

    Argus Paul

    I’m a biracial Korean-American photographer who works in both South Korea and the USA. Frequent travel between these two countries has provided me a unique perspective of Korean identity and its relationship to both global and regional communities. As an artist, I’m interested in creating work that gives voice to others and I often volunteer my efforts to marginalized communities. Currently, I am a member of Native Agency and Diversify Photo.

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    About The Collection…

    “How to Draw a Line” explores the border towns directly south of the DMZ. As a biracial Korean-American and as someone who has lived in one of these towns in the past, I felt a personal connection to this space caught between two worlds — where military camps, secluded villages, and tourist attractions all coexist while separating the North and South still officially at war.

    My memories guided and motivated me to revisit the area. During the Fall of 2019, I trekked multiple times between the northeast and northwest coasts of South Korea. While the routes can be drawn as literal lines on a map, the images draw a conceptual “photographic line” that traces the overall journey. Throughout these travels, I witnessed a liminal existence: subdued yet expressive, in spaces simultaneously active and still. The camera captures the subtle surreality of these isolated areas, offering an unexpected yet often overlooked view into Korean life.

  • Jukka Vehmas

    Jukka Vehmas

    Jukka Vehmas

    I’m Jukka Vehmas, Helsinki based streetphotographer from Finland. I shoot both film and digital. Nowdays I’m intrested on shooting small details, colours and funny coincidences on the streets. For me photographing is relaxing and creative hobby

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    About The Collection…

    This is my random collection   from the streets both colours and bnw. Enjoy!!

  • Sai Min Htetoo

    Sai Min Htetoo

    Sai Min Htet Oo aka Dede

    I am Sai Min Htet Oo aka Dede. I am a freelance street photographer based in New York, born in Myanmar also known as Burma.

    I wasn’t sure what I wanted to do when I grew up. I always love to take pictures and as I get older my passion for photography grows. So I started to capture the sincere people’s expression, beautiful light, spaces, and whatever I see. Among them, I realized when I see people’s expressions and communicating with each other in my photos, my heart knew what I love. It is Street Photography. So I started learning about a street photo from Youtube, google, books and I asked some of the people who know more information about it. Later on, I met Rammy Narula on Facebook.I asked so many questions about the street photo and he helped and taught me more about it. I truly thank him for the button of my heart for teaching me more about street photography.

    First of all, I felt creepy taking photos of strangers without their permissions but after looking back at the pictures, I felt pleased with the results and all my fear went away. I am passionate about capturing moments instantaneously. I do believe the best moment never happens more than once and a good photo doesn’t require any explanation. I love to let my images speak for themselves.

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  • Kuba Abramowicz

    Kuba Abramowicz

    Kuba Abramowicz

    Born in 1984. I was brought upin pionki, a small industrial town in central poland. Ever since I was a kid I was very interested in exploring my neighbourhood and I knew I wanted to travel in the future.

    I went to university in krakow where I studied dentistry. It wasn’t until then when I got my first camera and started to shoot. After graduation I started to travel more. My camera bacame my travel companion and  the one thing I would not leave home without. At first I was mostly shooting away from home, soaking in the fascinating world I was discovering.

    Recently I started to shoot more ‘on my door step’. I find this much more challenging.

    I try to look for interesting moments and juxtapostion in the everydaylife. I like vivid colours and a little bit of humour in my photographs.

    Here some of my favourite photos from the last couple years.

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  • Peter Kiraly

    Peter Kiraly

    Peter Kiraly

    My name is Peter Kiraly. I was born in 1993, in Kecskemét. I started out doing street photography in 2016, as part of an university school project. Since then I’ve been carrying my camera with myself everywhere I go and I try to capture “decisive moments” which are sometimes humorous and/or absurd. The aesthetic and philosophical nature of photography also interest me besides its visual aspects, therefore I really enjoy discussions that revolve around these subjects.

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    About The Collection…

    I often don’t plan my series, they form on their own by revealing their connections. This (non-exhaustive) collection strives to showcase the variety of my photographs. However, I feel like I search for the same prospect as every other artist (which is also what the art of photography is in itself dedicated to): the possibility to mediate between reality and our sense of the world.

  • Bjane Levine

    Bjane Levine

    Bjane Levine

    I was raised in the suburbs of New Jersey, a short bus ride from New York City. I earned a PhD in Biochemistry from Columbia University, but left the field of molecular biology research and then worked as a manager in Health Care. After leaving research, I took an interest in photography and began taking classes at ICP and other online platforms. I further honed my skills through many photography trips around the world. My photography spans many genres including street photography, landscape photography and long exposure cityscapes. I continue to work on my project, Urban Tales. It has evolved to include both candid portraits, scenes on the corner and reflections of city life.

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    About The Collection…

    This project is a series of candid portraits of strangers and reflections of scenes captured on the streets of New York City. I prefer to capture transitory scenes on the street without the knowledge of the subject so that the expression, gesture and/or movement are authentic. I go out with no expectations of subject matter other than looking for a moment, which elicits some emotion that I respond to with the subject, it is mainly driven by an internal signal that connects me to the subject or situation. Often, I will shoot a few images and walk on my way, but sometimes I find that a place has great potential and I need the patience to wait around for a scene to evolve. I am drawn to creating layered scenes as well as up close candid portraits. I try to respect the subjects that I photograph, taking an image of a fleeting moment, which I observe with no intent other than to memorialize the scene. The resulting photograph is real for the subject/s as well as myself, yet it may not be a truthful representation of what actually occurred.   New York has been a place that I can wander the streets relatively inconspicuously and feel as if I am part of a bigger society. The people in the photographs all possess a characteristic, gesture, or physical trait that I identify as part of my own story. The series is a composite of pieces of my life – a self-portrait.

  • Teemu Jarvinen

    Teemu Jarvinen

    Teemu Jarvinen

    Teemu Jarvinen is a finnish born street photographer who has spent a lot of time photographing the night, especially around asia. He first started traveling the world in 2014 as a digital nomad, which led him to many beautiful places and eventually pushed him into photography. He quickly got obsessed with it, starting as a landscape photographer but quickly switched to shooting the streets in a dark, often cyberpunk-esque style.
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    About The Collection…

    This collection, “Winter in Japan”, was shot in northern Japan in the beginning of 2019. Usually street photographers are all over Tokyo, Osaka and Kyoto, but Hokkaido gets less attention which made me want to check it out and capture the scenes. I often went out late at night, not trying to capture people directly but rather the feeling of cold darkness. Eventually it became one of my favorite projects.