4/28/11

Roger Ballen




Roger Ballen is an American photographer who works (among other things) documenting rural South Africa. The photographs are stunning, and blur the line between reality and staging: its easy to see his hand in the staging of the photographs, but unclear what elements are his responsibility. Check out his work on his website!

www.rogerballen.com


4/27/11

Alejandro Chaskielberg + Underøath








This guy just won the Sony Photographer of the year award. I think this stuff is really unbelievable. Check him out here: http://www.chaskielberg.com/


also: TILT SHIFT BREAKDOWN + sugimoto!



-alex!

4/25/11

Jon Rafman - 9 eyes



Hey y'all

I've been getting really into some work by this guy Jon Rafman. In one of his projects, he makes large scale prints of images he captures in Google Street View. This is pretty crazy, considering the nature of this work as photography. He is essentially doing Bresson's work, searching for the Decisive Moment, but rather than shooting it himself, he's using the (literally) millions of images that Google has produced for Street View. The work talks about the beauty of our world through an interesting lens, the nine eyes of the Google camera. The three images I've posted here came from the blog Rafman uses to document the project, which is here:

http://9-eyes.com

-gregory

4/18/11

Andreas Feininger



Andreas Feininger was one of the most important photographers of the 20th century.
Check out more of his work and read about his life here.

4/11/11

Alternative meets 4x5 and its ILLLLLLLL

LEGO 4x5!: http://inhabitat.com/incredible-legotron-mark-i-camera-made-from-lego-blocks/

1024 Architecture

3D Bridge / Report #2 from 1024 on Vimeo.



This is fantastic.

-Sarp

4/8/11

VIP Observers of an Atomic Bomb

...from Capturing the Atom Bomb on Film, a New York Times piece on the US' nuclear experiments. More information about this image as well as additional photos can be found here.

-Sarp
http://www.foam.org/

Wonderful website tackling issues surrounding the future of photography.

Dale