Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Photographer #172: George Georgiou

George Georgiou, 1961, Great-Britain, has an impressive body of work. In his latest book Fault Lines/Turkey/East/West he focused on the normal everyday life of Turkish people in a drastically changing country. Turkey is constantly modernizing and urbanizing due to mass migration from villages to cities. To persue his photography George has been to various countries as Serbia, Kosovo, Georgia and Ukraine. The following images come from the series Fault Lines: Turkey East WestTransit Ukraine: After the Revolution, Turks2 and Between the Lines Part 2.





Website: www.georgegeorgiou.net

Monday, November 29, 2010

Photographer #171: Asger Carlsen

Asger Carlsen, 1973, Denmark, released a monograph with the title Wrong. The images inside the book seem to be images that anyone could take. They are shot with the built-in flash of a simple camera resembling photographs that one can find in everyone's home. However, the images of Asger are "wrong", they contain elements that are impossible and it's is hard to see how the photographer has achieved this. Carlsen' photography is disturbing, humorous and well composed. The following images come from the book Wrong and the series Hester.




Website: www.asgercarlsen.com

Friday, November 26, 2010

Photographer #170: Jehad Nga

Jehad Nga, 1976, USA, is a photojournalist that travels to some of the most dangerous places on this planet. He is one of the few that have covered Somalia extensively. He has been there many times in the last 5 years. Jehad covered stories in Iraq, Darfur and Kenya. In the village Turkana, he photographed the people inside a hut thus removing the harsh environment. He wanted to document the faces of the people that are at risk of dying due to water shortage and starvation. The following images come from the series Turkana, Iraq 2003-2008 - The Wait and In Memoria Del Futuro: Mogadishu 2010.




Website: www.jehadnga.com

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Photographer #169: Josef Schulz

Josef Schulz, 1966, Poland, lives and works in Germany. In his series Sign Out he photographed billboards from below and in postprocessing he deleted any text or logos. Schulz often manipulates his images to add meaning to them. In the series Übergang (Transition) he photographed the border posts that are no longer in use. He blurs the background to get them out of context. Josef has exhibited extensively around the globe. The following images come from the series Sign Out, Übergang and Sachliches.




Website: www.josefschulz.de

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Photographer #168: Lieko Shiga

Lieko Shiga, 1980, Japan, graduated in 2004 at the Chelsea University of Art and Design in London. Since then she has released two books, Lilly in 2007 and CANARY in 2009. Her photographs are mysterious, intimate and emotional. For her series Lilly she photographed the people living in her block in East London. She covered an outside wall completely with a black cloth and photographed the people in front of it. The entire project consists of 80 images. The following images come from her series CANARY, Lilly and Damien Court.




Website: www.liekoshiga.com

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Photographer #167: Youssef Nabil

Egyptian photographer Youssef Nabil, 1972, works and lives in New York. His images are hand colored gelatin silver prints. Next to his portraits of singers, writers and actors, often from the Arab world, he makes self-portraits that "reflect his dislocated life away from Egypt." Youssef's images remind us of film-stills from earlier Egyptian and Arab movies. He has been in numerous solo and group exhibitions and released two books; Sleep in my Arms, 2007 and I won't let you die, 2008. The following images come from his portfolio's Works I, Works II and Works III.




Website: www.youssefnabil.com

Monday, November 22, 2010

Photographer #166: Shai Kremer

Shai Kremer, 1974, Israel, lives and works in New York. In his project Infected Landscape, with which he has had several solo exhibitions in the last few years, he focused on the effect of the military on the Iraeli landscape. Since 2002 he has been working on a series in New York. Instead of concentrating on the elements that make New York great, he takes us on a journey past the "less-explored". The following images come from the projects New York, Fallen Empires and Desert.




Website: www.shaikremer.com

Friday, November 19, 2010

Photographer #165: Ghada Khunji

Ghada Khunji, 1967, Kingdom of Bahrain, lives and works in Brooklyn, but travels the world for her projects to places such as Honduras, India, The Dominican Republic and Cuba. In 2006 she was named the Lucie discovery of the year and has won various other awards. Ghada concentrates on documentarary photography that consist of portrait and landscape imagery and does this with great respect for her subjects. The following images come from her projects Hallelujah Momma, The Dominican Republic and America (Color).




Website: www.ghadakhunji.com

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Photographer #164: Marco Bolognesi

Marco Bolognesi, 1974, Italy, works and lives in London. He can be described as a multimedia artist, because next to his photography he also draws, paints, uses video, makes installations and uses collage techniques. His photography consists of portraits of women with props added. The women become sculptures, with plants added to their heads or parts from a computer. In his series C.O.D.E.X Blue, he painted his model completely blue. Marco released several books with his work. The following images come from the series C.O.D.E.X Blue, Babylon Federation and BlackinBlack.




Website: www.marcobolognesi.co.uk

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Photographer #163: Andreas Laszlo Konrath

Andreas Laszlo Konrath, 1981, UK, currently lives in Brooklyn and is a portrait photographer. His main focus lies on identity and youth. He studied Fine Art at the London Guilghall University. Andreas has released several books with Pau Wau Publications. The latest one So Alone I Keep the Wolves at Bay contains images from the series Come Friendly Bombs about the band Gallows. The following images come from My Generation, Come Friendly Bombs and The Faces You Know (Part I).




Website: www.andreaslaszlokonrath.com

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Photographer #162: Alejandra Laviada

Alejandra Laviada, 1980, Mexico, studied painting at the Rhode Island School of Design and received a masters degree in photography from the School of Visual Arts. She goes into abandoned buildings for long-term periods to photograph the objects, often transformed to sculptures that she finds in these spaces. Alejandra therefore not only records these disappearing spaces, but also suggests stories about the people that have once inhabited these buildings. The following images come from the series Photo Sculptures, Juarez 56 and Typologies.




Website: www.alejandralaviada.com

Monday, November 15, 2010

Photographer #161: Olaf Martens

Olaf Martens, 1963, Germany, has an impressive body of work. He is a fashion and nudes photographer that has found a way to merge various styles of photography into one. His staged photographs have a documentary feel to them. Olaf's images are playful, classy and contain humour. He has been in an amazing amount of solo and group exhibitions worldwide  The following images come from his portfolio's Surface, InterReal and Home Sweet Home.




Website: www.olaf-martens.de

Friday, November 12, 2010

Photographer #160: Alejandro Cartagena

Alejandro Cartagena, 1977, Dominican Republic, works and lives in monterrey, Mexico. His photographic works focuses on the urban, social and environmental issues of Latin America. In his series Between Borders he has photographed the people living between two borders, the one that devides USA and Mexico, the other of drug trafficking cartels in nearby ranchos. The three series below deal with the issue of urbanization and the effects on the environment, landscapes and it's inhabitants. The following images come from the series People of Suburbia, Fragmented Cities and Lost Rivers.




Website: www.alejandrocartagena.com
Video on Lost Rivers: www.podcast.tv

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Photographer #159: Paul M. Smith

Paul M. Smith, 1969, Great-Britain often focuses on the theme of masculinity. In series as Artist Rifles and Make My Night he is the only person in the photograph. They are several images put into one using himself in various roles. In the series Mr Smith, he has manipulated the selfportraits to resemble those of famous male figures. In his series This is not Pornography he plays with the gender and sexuality. The following images come from the series Mr Smith, Artist Rifles and Make My Night.




Website: www.paulmsmith.co.uk

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Photographer #158: Pierre Winther

Pierre Winther, 1964, Denmark, makes dramatic, cinematic and storytelling images. The photographs by Winther are often larger than life and, due to the saturated colors and his perspectives, remind us of great movies. Pierre is next to being a photographer also a music video and commercial director. He has worked for clients as Diesel, Levi's and Hugo Boss and made video's for Beastie Boys, INXS and Björk. The following images come from the series Holiday on Earth, Eye of the Beholder and Mr. Ward.




Website: www.pierrewinther.com

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Photographer #157: Tierney Gearon

Tierney Gearon, 1963, USA, made photographic series involving her mother and her children. Her photographs have been called "manipulative, disturbingly ambigious and perverse." When her series I am a Camera, about her two children, was exhibited at the Saatchi Gallery, the London Police demanded to take them down. The images by Tierney are personal, innocent and pure. In her latest project Explosure she stays close to home, taking pictures of her family life and on family trips, but this times she double-exposes her negatives. The following images come from the series Explosure, The Mother Project and I am a Camera.




Website: www.tierneygearon.com

Monday, November 8, 2010

Photographer #156: Nicholas Hughes

Nicholas Hughes, 1963, Great-Britain, "examines the space between the world that people inhabit and that which the nature still claims as its own" in order to "explore the essence of the human spirit and its relationship with nature". His work has appeared at various photo festivals and exhibitions worldwide. He mainly works in London, the British coastline, Germany and Switzerland to make his photographs. The following images come from the series Field Verse II, In Darkness Visible Verse I and Edge Verse II.




Website: www.nicholas-hughes.net