Category: Photography

  • Artsy on Escape Into Life: Linus Lohoff

    I have a feeling there is a contingency out there who think Pinterest is filled with nothing but images of shoes, decadent cuisine, house porn and Ryan Gosling memes.  OK, perhaps they have a point.  But when you follow smart, intelligent, artsy folks like I do, Pinterest can be a treasure trove of artistic goodies, like the work of German photographer Linus Lohoff, whose work I’m featuring in my Artist Watch over on Escape Info Life today.  Hope you’ll head over to EIL to check it out and while you’re at it, take a peek at the Artsy Forager boards on Pinterest!

    Linus Lohoff on Escape Into Life

  • Woodland Delicacies: Kari Herer

    Woodland Delicacies: Kari Herer

    As you may have gathered by now, hubby and I spend a lot of time in the woods.  Which means we’ve had our fair share of wildlife sightings, heck, we have deer visiting our yard every night at our current lakeside rental.  The sight of a moose, elk or bear is thrilling in a yikes-if-he-wanted-to-he-could-take-me-down kind of way.  But for me, it’s the lovely quiet and grace of smaller woodland creatures that captures my heart.  These prints from photographer and artist Kari Herer really impart their impish qualities I love so much.

    No. 9893 Fox & Flower
    No. 9889 Fox & Flower

    Even though deer sightings are pretty frequent for us, I still get a thrill when I look up and see them grazing in the woods around our yard.  Their quiet, peaceful movements always entrance me.  Rabbits and foxes are less frequent visitors, but we’ve had our glimpses..

    Rabbit No. 0048
    Rabbit No. 0031

    Herer’s mix of whimsically sketchy drawings juxtaposed with elegantly styled florals truly speaks to the dignity of these creatures and how we delight in them.

    To see more of Kari Herer’s work, please visit her website.  You can purchase prints of her work in her Etsy shop— a series of these would be lovely in a nursery!

    Featured image is No. 9894 Fox & Flower.  All images are via the artist’s Etsy shop.

  • Friday Finds: Young Photosnappers

    Friday Finds: Young Photosnappers

    There is something about the art of photography that has always made it appealing to the young.  These days maybe, it is the advanced technology often involved.  But most of all, I think photography provides a relatively accessible mode of self-expression, which as we all know, is such a huge part of discovering who we are and who we are meant to be.  I’m happy to wrap up F/Stop Artsy week with a round-up of some amazingly talented young photographers!

    Eleanor Leonne Bennett
    Kristen Cates
    Brian Oldham
    Cristina Otero
    Alex Stoddard

    Eleanor Leonne Bennett | Kristen Cates |  Brian Oldham | Cristina Otero | Alex Stoddard  

    I hope you’ll check out the websites of these young talents, linked above.  Let’s encourage the next artsy generation!

    All images are via the artists’ websites, sourced above.

  • Artsy Dwelling: A Photoshopped Home

    Artsy Dwelling: A Photoshopped Home

    For many folks, the only photographs on display at home are family portraits and vacation snaps.  This afternoon, I’d like to get your creative inspiration going with some beautiful examples of the way art photography can have an amazing impact on your home’s artsiness!

    Using photography can give an edge to an ultra-feminine space–

    Home of Philip Leeming & Leong Ong

    via

    Photograph of Beirut by Elger Esser

    via 

    You can make a big impact in a small space like a dining room with an oversized photograph–

    Interior design by Design Loft Interiors; photo mural by Alex Turco

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    Interior Maison Magazine, Oct/Nov 2010

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    Designer: Thom Felicia; Featured photograph: Roberto Dutesco

    To add graphic texture to a neutral space, monochromatic photography does the trick–

    Interior design by Julia Starr Sanford; Art photography by Thomas Hager

    via the artist

    **be sure to check the Artsy Forager Facebook album, Artsy Dwelling, for more of Tom’s residential installations!

    Interior design and styling by Lisa McGraw; art photography by Daniele Albright

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    How about personalizing your space by commissioning an art photographer to document your little ones?

    Interior photography Llama’s Valley Magazine

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    Interior photography by Bieke Claessens

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    Or even better, enlarge a favorite photo of them and fill an entire wall!

    Design by Brian Patrick Flynn

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    How are you living with photography, Artsies?

    Image sources linked below each photo.

  • A Curious Haunting: Kisa Kavass

    A Curious Haunting: Kisa Kavass

    I love a good mystery.  Not the throat-slasher kind, but the good ol’ Nancy Drew, Wilkie Collins, Daphne Du Maurier variety.  In this world of over sharing, there is something so magical and magnetic to be found in the mysterious.  The work of Tennessee based artist Kisa Kavass brings to life her own cryptic yet enchanting imaginings.

    Kavass’ sepia-tinged images are full of misty light, curious shadows and haunting visages.  There is an other-worldly spell cast by them that though shrouded in enigma, we sense that in this world we are safe.

    Though things may be as they seem, the mysteries are innocuous.

    Like strange dreams from which we awaken not startled or scared, but wishing we could revisit with each slumber.

    To see more of Kisa Kavass’s work, please visit her website.

    Thank you to artist Christina Baker for introducing me to Kisa’s work!  All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Nowhere Land: Jenna Gang

    Nowhere Land: Jenna Gang

    Photography, more than any other medium possesses such a power to transport us to anywhere in the world.  And because of it’s documentary nature, we often believe what a photograph is telling us.  When New York based photographer Jenna Gang contacted me, I was especially intrigued by her series of images from Israel.  It turns out this controversial country has very special meaning for Jenna.  I hope you’ll enjoy hearing her talk about the series in this email interview we conducted recently.

    Artsy Forager | Your series of photographs from Israel have such a different, more quiet focus than most imagery coming from that country.  What was your catalyst for the series?  Did it evolve over time or did you begin with your concept already in mind?

    Jenna Gang | The catalyst for this series was my grandfather. As a holocaust survivor, he expressed throughout my childhood how important it was for me to visit the holy land.  After he passed away, his 35mm camera was given to me by my grandmother.  By merging his camera with his aspirations for me, I thought it only fitting to honor his memory by shooting this series.

    Throughout my development as a photographer, I have always been drawn to images that were minimalistic and left interpretation to the viewer. Through photographs, the world sees Israel as a conflict. I wanted to show that Israel is so much more than that. I simplified my subject to lines and shapes to reflect the natural beauty of the country.


    AF | Who do you count among your photographic heroes?

    JG |  In hopes of not sounding too generic, most of my fellow FIT alumni are my heroes. This is because although our foundation was built in the same way our results vary so widely. Erin Kennedy, Christian Thorman and Nadirah Zakariya were each given the same tools that I was and yet we all emerged with distinct individual styles. I wait in anticipation to see what they create next.

    AF | What do you think you would be doing if you weren’t a photographer?

    JG |  If I weren’t a photographer, I’d be a food critic. Since I love to eat, this would be a worthy profession. I understand that I would have to eat some bad food along the way, but it would all be worth it for that one good dish.

    AF | What is your dream photography project?

    JG |  During my free time, I enjoy travelling the world via Google Earth, planning how I would capture each of the different landscapes. I am fascinated with Japan and would enjoy a trip to the countrysides of Tokyo, Samurai sword in tow.

    To see more of Jenna Gang’s work, please check out her website.


  • Magical Mystery Tour: Jody Miller

    Magical Mystery Tour: Jody Miller

    For me, one of the hallmarks of fine art photography is the ability to create and/or capture atmosphere.  Just one of the things that separates a good photograph from an amazing one.  Photographer Jody Miller‘s images give the viewer a sense of mystery in each place they capture.

    Miller’s photographs often catch us in an underrepresented area of a region.  A spot quintessentially indicative of a place, yet one not immediately associated with it.  In each, she creates an atmosphere of seeming abandonment and desolation, even if it is not so, our minds draw that conclusion.

    Britain
    California
    Pacific Northwest

    There is an element of mystery and suspense in the atmosphere of isolation.  It’s as if we’ve awoken to find ourselves completely alone in the world.

    To see more of Jody Miller’s photography, please visit her website.  Her work can be viewed in person at Lightbox Photographic Gallery in Astoria, Oregon, a truly fabulous little gallery dedicated completely to fine art photography.

    Artist found via Lightbox Photographic.  All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Artsy on Escape Into Life: Scott Newett

    You may remember photographer Scott Newett’s Solo Man image from my Art to Inspiration post last week.  It’s really one of the most striking images I’ve seen in a long time.  While perusing his website, I was struck by how carefully composed each image is, like a still from a Wes Anderson movie scene.  I couldn’t help but feature him over on Escape Into Life today.  This hipster had me at hello.

    Solo Man by Scott Newett

    Scott Newett on Escape Into Life

  • July Facebook Featured Artist: Thomas Hager

    July Facebook Featured Artist: Thomas Hager

    Isn’t it amazing to think that just like many young people get a confused look on their faces when you show them a vinyl record,  so has the use of film photography reached the brink of extinction.  But there are some photographers who are keepin’ it old school, like this month’s Facebook Featured Artist, Thomas Hager.

    Tom uses historic photographic processes of kallitype and cyanotype, which involves mixing chemicals and hand applying them to high quality archival paper.  The process involves contact printing an enlarged negative onto the paper, then fixing the image in a bath of sodium thiosulfate.

    The results of this process create a painterly texture to each print, as the inks settle down into the paper rather than laying on top of it.

    The monochromatic quality of these processes enhance the visual texture in each image, much like a black and white photograph might.  Yet the actual printed texture makes Hager’s cyanotypes and kallitypes feel more like richly hued paintings rather than photographs.

    Thomas Hager’s work is currently on exhibition at the Jacksonville International Airport in my hometown ( and his! ), Jacksonville, FL.  His work is featured alongside another Artsy Forager favorite, Christina Foard.  So if you’re in Jax or happen to be traveling through JIA, don’t miss it!

    Immersion, featuring Christina Foard & Thomas Hager at Jacksonville International Airport

    You can see more of Tom’s work on his website.  His originals are sublime and worth every penny, but if you’re on a budget, check out Town Editions, Tom’s limited edition series!

    All images via the artist.

  • Art to Inspiration: Smita Jacob

    Art to Inspiration: Smita Jacob

    Happy Independence Day to all my US Artsies!  Hope you are enjoying the holiday in the company of friends and family.  Hubby and I are enjoying purple mountain’s majesty at Glacier National Park!  This month’s Art to Inspiration artwork is a photograph by the fabulous Smita Jacob, photographer and blogger extraordinaire over at Hogger & Co.  I was excited to see the selection of a photograph for this month’s inspiration, as my resulting inspired gallery will give you a little sneak peek at next week’s photography event, F/Stop Artsy!

    The inspiration–

    Healing Yoga With Aarti by Smita Jacob

    The gallery– 

    My Potholes project by Claudia Ficca and Davide Luciano
    Frozen Series by Zena Holloway
    Tied Together by Martin Stranka
    The Brave by Sarah Ann Loreth
    Solo Man by Scott Newett

    Enjoy your holiday, Artsies!  Be sure to click on each photo to see more work from these talented photogs!

    You can find more information on Art to Inspiration here and if you would like to participate in the next Art to Inspiration, just fill out this form! Follow me and all the other Art to Inspiration bloggers on Twitter by subscribing here.  Let the inspiring begin!