Creative, high - energy photographer producing premium - quality
photos in studio settings.
Not exact matches
I actually started something on fire
in the work kitchen, nearly
setting off smoke detectors
in a commerical
photo studio full of
photo equipment.
I decided to
set up my own little
photo studio which makes my office currently a mess but I'm learning something new... My first trials are
in yesterday's post...
If you look at the sunlight
photos in the next
set, you'll actually see that my pinky nail has more glitter on it than the
studio set.
Bonney gives special attention to underrepresented women of color and women of the LGBTQ community, and features
photos of everyone featured
in her chosen work space, from television
sets to art
studios.
I bring these models into the
studio, photograph them, and then I find the
settings I would like to place them
in — either from the
photos I take, books, or online sources.
A particularly memorable experience is seeing the portraits by Alexia Webster, who
set up mobile
studios at refugee camps around the world, capturing
photos of refugees
in front of improvised backdrops fashioned from bedspreads.
She'll introduce herself, take their
photos, then work from those images
in her
studio to compose larger - than - life portraits
set against fantastically textured streetscapes.
Upper installation view with Nika Neelova, Folded Rooms, perimeter of
studio traced
in stainless steel and wax and folded, 2017 —
Photo: Damian Griffiths A surprisingly extensive and central new project space makes the most of its unusual
set - up here through a Russian - oriented show which has an underworld, a transitional corridor and a more ethereal upper zone, all tied
in to the number 17 — as
in the anniversary of 1917» revolution, the number of years Putin has been
in power, and the time cicadas spend underground prior to their «resurrection» for a month of mating.
I was
setting up make - shift darkrooms to process the pinhole
photos I was making, once
in the basement of the MCDC
studios, another
in Cunningham's dressing room at Bard College.
We
set up a
photo studio in the back of the club and all the photographs we take become source material,» he explains.
Artists too can flourish from a seeming disadvantage of working
in a tiny space, like Korean artist JeeYoung Lee, who eschews the path of digital
photo - editing
in the creation of her stunning dreamscapes, all meticulously
set up
in her tiny Seoul
studio measuring 11.8 by 13.5 feet.