Mexican-American photographer Alec Dawson makes nude art since 2007. Born in Mexico City in 1975 and having lived in the USA, Mexico, Dominican Republic, Turkey, and Australia, Dawson graduated with a degree in Civil Engineering from the University of California,
Vancouver-based artist Ed Spence takes photos of crumpled pieces of reflective paper, he then prints the image and cuts out a section using a blade. Subsequently he cuts up the section into small pixels, re-arranging them by colour. These works
Dutch photographer Rene Mesman creates images borrowing the style of still life paintings: a pineapple fish, a peach-nut, a long-haired owl, and a pink artichoke. More wacky associations after the break.
This fall, the Victoria & Albert Museum will exhibit the definitive retrospective of the work by master photographer Horst P. Horst (1906-1999) – one of the leading photographers of the previous century. In his illustrious career that spanned 60 years,
22-year-old photographer Sean Mundy finds meaning and inspiration in his subjectivity, creating impassioned images which contain a wide variety of emotion. Simplistic and allegorical, Mundy offers personal glimpses into moments of self-doubt, confusion and pain. His artwork is left open
The third edition of Unseen Photo Fair takes place next weekend in Amsterdam. Unseen is an international photography fair and festival that centers on previously unpublished work. The third edition introduces Unseen Premieres: work that has never ever been shown:
Publishing company Black Balloon sent ‘And Every Day Was Overcast’ (read our review here) author-photographer Paul Kwiatkowski to Mount Shasta, CA to investigate the volcano that some claim to be the site of Telos, a hidden city inhabited by advanced
Photographer, artist and teacher David Samuel Stern uses photography to examine the relationship between vision and representation. Originally from suburban Chicago but now living in Brooklyn, he received an MFA in digital imaging & photography from Washington University in
Colombian photographer Faber Franco plays with hidden characters that reveal themselves along the way, but only in part. His dreamy and melancholy images are juxtaposed with playful elements and surreal settings. Most of his photos are self-portraits. More of his
French photographer Anaïs Boileau‘s final project at ECAL is entitled ‘Plein Soleil’ and features pale, sunbathing women juxtaposed with odd, colourful Roman architecture. Documentary and fiction are mixed with irony, while a longing for exoticism seems omnipresent.