Tenesh Webber is a Canadian abstract photographer whose work explores and challenges conventions of
traditional black and white photography.
These new scenes are photographed using
traditional black and white photography techniques.
Not exact matches
Payne films this road trip dramedy in rich
black -
and -
white, perhaps echoing back to another great film about someone from the Midwest on a quest, The Wizard of Oz, in which Dorothy's home life on a far in Kansas is in
traditional B&W
photography,
and her experience in the great land of Oz is in vibrant color.
His use of color film in the early 1980s, at a time when British
photography was dominated by
traditional black -
and -
white social documentary, had a revolutionizing effect on the genre.
It features: a series of
black -
and -
white photographs of elderly actors by Liu Zheng that play with conventions of ethnographic
and opera
photography; two videos by Chen Qiulin that make use of
traditional opera characters to respond to changes wrought by the Three Gorges Dam; The Forbidden City (Zijincheng) by Liu Wei, a lyrical video of theatrical «glove puppets» (budai kuilei) shown publicly for the first time;
and videos by Cui Xiuwen that connect to opera in more oblique ways, through performative elements
and symbolic props, gestures,
and costumes.
His use of color film in the late 1970s
and early 1980s, at a time when British
photography was dominated by
traditional black -
and -
white social documentary, had a revolutionizing effect on the genre.
Out of the many mediums across which he works, Andrew Wilson has chosen two
traditional forms for a work about the unsung softness
and denied potential of
black men in America:
black and white photography and an artist book.
Forrest's
photography is rooted in
traditional Black and White darkroom processes, exploring the unique visual
and spatial possibilities of images created solely in the lens.