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Posts Tagged ‘Life’

Blickfang: Half Life

26 Nov

Als ich die von Bilder Michael Ackerman letztes Jahr erstmals in Berlin vor mir sah, ohne Rahmen und versetzt an der weißen Galeriewand befestigt, hatte es mich gepackt, geschüttelt und getroffen.

Ich musste mir den Fotoband „Half Life“* unbedingt zulegen, ganz egal, was mein Konto dazu sagte. Nennen wir es reflexartige Überlebensreaktion. Seitdem atme ich ein wenig ruhiger und merke es bei einem der Bilder besonders.

Blumenvase © Michael-Ackerman

Kürzlich las ich, dass die Betrachtung eines Bildes immer von den eigenen Erfahrungen und der Sensibilität für bestimmte Themen abhängig ist.

Betrachte ich das Bild, passiert etwas mit mir. Mein Gedankenkonglomerat kippt sich aus und setzt alte Bilder in mir frei. Ich bin ein DDR-Kind und mit meinen Eltern oft weggefahren. Ich kann mich an farblose Unterkünfte erinnern, an leere und große Speiseräume mit Deckchen und jeweils einer Vase und Blumen bestückt.

An die Menschen erinnere ich mich nur schemenhaft, so schenmenhaft wie die Menschen in Ackermans Buch dargestellt sind. Immerhin war ich erst sieben oder acht Jahre alt, da fühlt man sich klein, verletzlich und vor allem unwichtig zwischen all den großen Menschen, die doch immer viel klüger sind und das Kind nicht groß beachten.

Dies ist also mein Bild, obwohl ein fremdes, denn ich bestücke es mit meiner Erinnerung, die versteckt irgendwo in meinem Kopf saß und darauf wartete, hervorgeholt zu werden. Darüber hinaus kann ich diesen Fotoband aber allen ans Herz legen, die Schwarzweißwelten lieben und auch keine Angst haben, gedanklich mit ihnen in die Tiefe zu fallen.

Informationen zum Buch:

Michael Ackerman: „Half Life“
Seiten: 168 (Gebundene Ausgabe)
Abbildungen: schwarzweiß
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Dewi Lewis Publishing

* Das ist ein Affiliate-Link zu Amazon. Wenn Ihr darüber etwas bestellt, erhalten wir eine kleine Provision, Ihr zahlt aber keinen Cent mehr.


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin

 
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Woodhouses: Photos Envision Tiny Urban Life in the Forest

15 Nov

[ By Steph in Art & Photography & Video. ]

Woodhouses Miniature Urban Forest 1

What tiny universes might exist behind the bark of trees deep within the forest? You’re most likely envisioning the grubs, ants, beetles and other creatures that actually live out their (sometimes fascinating) life cycles there, but artist Daniel Barreto sees something else altogether. His digitally composed ‘woodhouses’ imagine tiny urban worlds that could be visible to the human eye if only we looked a little closer.

Woodhouses Miniature Urban Forest 2

Barreto photographed trees in a snowy landscape in New Hampshire, as well as doorways, windows and other urban architectural elements from Boston, combining the different sets for an ethereal result.

Woodhouses Tiny Urban Forest 3

Illuminated entrances with intricate ceilings beckon passersby to ascend into the higher branches of a birch tree from within the trunk. Stained glass windows glow, and restaurants offer refuge from the cold.

trees

The flickering lights of gif images from Barreto’s series make the illusion even more convincing, and might just make you want to take a walk around the woods to see what you can spot yourself.

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Real Life Instagram: Street Views Framed with Colored Filters

11 Nov

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

real life instagram

Instagram is both broadly adopted and heavily criticized for the faux-vintage filter options provided to users, providing opportunities for aptly-timed and well-executed spoofs like this project.

real life photo filter

real green filter

In his Real Life Instagram installation art series, Brazilian artist Bruno Ribeiro has begun framing everything from mundane graffiti on walls and ubiquitous CCTV cameras to famous London monuments. These he carefully surrounds with physical emulations of digital snapshot borders.

real street meta picture

Hilariously enough, many people then stop to photograph the frame and the scene … presumably some of them uploading the results to Instagram, completely the somewhat silly circle.

real image filter art

Add view counts and voting stats and you can trick people, at least for a moment, into wondering if they are wandering online or in the real world. Hashtags, in turn, encourage more online sharing.

real photo image montage

The work plays on our expectations and associations. Translucent and colorful green, blue, yellow, orange and red plastic makes whatever is seen through the resulting rectangle somehow special, different or noticeable.

street scene color filtered

As in photography, the simple act of adding a frame makes a scene feel somehow intentional in its selection, except, more like movies or video in general, the scenes in this case may never stand still.

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RAF photos of the year gives glimpse of high-flyer life

31 Oct

Parade_parade-shun_.jpg

The Royal Air Force’s annual photographic competition invites photographers employed in the service of the RAF to submit photos in eleven categories. Winners are recognized in an awards ceremony and finalists’ photos are available for viewing online. Take a look at a selection of our favorites. The images are a captivating peek inside the RAF on the ground and in the sky. See gallery

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Real Street Photographer Documents Virtual Life in GTA V

25 Oct

[ By WebUrbanist in Gaming & Computing & Technology. ]

gta v street photos

Advanced artificial characters and enhanced in-game graphics have increasingly made in-game worlds look and feel like real-life places. It was only a matter of time before photographers hit the digital pavement to shoot the resulting scenes, equipped with an in-game camera no less.

grand theft street art

Fernando Pereira Gomes has shifted from the actual streets of New York to the simulated ones inside the San Andreas of Grand Theft Auto V. People and buildings come alive with lighting, reflections, details and detritus, all captured in his photo series Street Photography V.

gta v lonely walker

“Being a big fan of GTA, I went to the midnight launch and played the night away,” Gomes explains.  “As I played, I noticed that the characters had cameras on their phones… With this new tool, and the huge world of Los Santos, I started experimenting with the camera and the digital streets.” His resulting (and ongoing) series captures everything from passed-out drunks and hungover street walkers to ambling pedestrians and everyday business people heading to and from work.

grand theft auto street

“What I found was remarkable. The game is so realistic that it felt like being in the streets outside, running around for shots, anticipating passersby’s movements and reactions. In a way, it was also incredibly frightening that these algorithms could look so real, or is it that we ourselves are becoming ever more algorithmic?”

gta v character art

As with many forms of art, there are limitations one can see as restrictive or liberating, like the inability to tilt the camera significantly up or down. Also as in real life, there are many shots of opportunity that only come once – you have to look around, see what is happening, snap an image and hope for the best.

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Ironic Typography Posters That Show the True Photographer’s Life

09 Oct

There is a chance you’ve seen a few posters with quotes about photographers on Facebook, Pinterest, Tumblr or other social-media platforms before. I’m talking about quotes like “Owning a camera does not make you a photographer” or others like “Life is like photography–we develop it from the negatives,” which all the photographers tend to share. Today, I’d like to bring Continue Reading

The post Ironic Typography Posters That Show the True Photographer’s Life appeared first on Photodoto.


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Second Skin: Kevlar Backpack for Life & Travel in War Zones

21 Aug

[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Products & Packaging. ]

emergency war zone backpack

For many of the world’s citizens (and travelers), the threat of bodily harm from war or terror attacks is a daily fact of life. Constructed of bulletproof material, this backpack is designed to reduce the risk of personal injury in unstable regions.

emergency disaster survival backpack

Dubbed Rhino Skin (part of Second-Chance Gear) and designed by Hadassah College graduate Hila Raam, the pack’s back and side straps pull forward and wrap around the wearer to form bulletproof vest.

emergency backpack bomb shelter

On top, a likewise projectile-and-debris-resistant hood can be deployed when one hits the proverbial deck upon hearing an air raid siren, helping shield the wearer, if warned, from additional shrapnel injuries.

emergency hooded attack protection

While it will not do much in some  extreme, close-proximity situations (where nothing short of full body armor would help), it does cover the head and torso, protecting vital organs and reducing damage potential from rocket, mortar or bomb strikes.

emergency bullet proof pack

From the designer: the Rhino Skin is “a modular backpack combining kevlar used as a civilian personal protection system in
countries or areas that are under daily attacks, protecting against debris and impact created from missile and rocket attacks.This unique bag pack protects the essential life or death body areas … the head, neck, back and the sides of the body. Most important the brain, heart, liver and kidneys are fully protected.”

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7 Crazy Theories About Life, The Universe & Everything

19 Aug

[ By Steph in Conceptual & Futuristic & Technology. ]

Mind Blowing Theories Universe main

Our universe is located inside the black hole of another universe – or it’s just a holographic projection – or it’s all one big computer game being played by bored super-intelligent aliens. Or not. These scientific and philosophical theories about the origin and nature of existence can be major head-scratchers, but there are at least a handful of physicists around the world who support each one.

Multiverse Theory: We All Have a Doppelganger

Mind Blowing Theories Multiverse Doppelgangers

(image via: kevin dooley)

It’s highly unlikely that we live in the sole existing universe. We’re probably in one of many. Physicists have theorized that there could be infinite universes existing next to each other in a sort of giant patchwork quilt, that the Big Bang led to the generation of many other ‘bubble universes’ and that parallel universes hover just outside of our own. Columbia University physicist Brian Greene, author of the book ‘The Hidden Reality: Parallel Universes and the Deep Laws of the Cosmos’ says the latter theory supports the idea that we all have doppelgangers.

“The argument for doppelgangers is pretty straightforward. Assuming that space goes on infinitely far, in any finite chunk, matter can only arrange itself in a finite number of ways, like cards in a deck. You and I are just a configuration of particles, so sooner or later we’re going to repeat. Matter can almost repeat its configuration but not repeat it identically. Your physical body may repeat, but your mental configuration can be a little bit different, so there might be an evil version of you, and a version that loves skydiving.”

Our Universe Could Be in a Black Hole

Mind Blowing Theories Universe Black Hole

(images via: wikimedia commons)

Our universe might be so small and insignificant in the grand scheme of things, that it’s hidden inside the black hole of another universe, totally unbeknownst to theoretical sentient beings in that universe. And that means all the black holes so far found in our own universe could also contain doorways to alternate realities. This theory is based on new mathematical models of the spiraling motion of matter falling into a black hole.  The matter absorbed by black holes isn’t necessarily destroyed – it could be expelled, to become the basis for new galaxies, stars, and planets. This could explain the mystery as to how the universe could have started with a singularity in the Big Bang theory – instead of just existing with no explanation, it was birthed by a white hole, the hypothetical escape hatch for matter at the other end of a black hole.

The Ekpyrotic Scenario: Universes Colliding

Mind Blowing Theories Universes Colliding

(image via: western paradigm)

Did our universe actually come about due to a collision of two three-dimensional worlds? The ekpyrotic scenario is a cosmological model of the origin and shape of the universe that illustrates it as a giant, stretched rubber band that could fly back into our faces at any moment. It contradicts the Big Bang theory, in which time and space began when something created a bubble of energy from nothing – a bubble that blew up into what we now know as the universe in a tiny fraction of a millisecond. Based on string theory (which suggests that once you get smaller than an atom, everything is a 2D unit called a quantum string – an attempt to marry Einstein’s theory of relativity with quantum physics), it’s highly controversial, but intriguing all the same.

In the ekpyrotic scenario, two three-dimensional worlds (branes) collide in a space with an extra (fourth) spatial dimension. It amends the earliest point of the Big Bang theory, stating that rather than beginning with nearly infinite temperature and density, the universe began cold and nearly vacuous.

“The hot expanding universe we know came as a result of a collision that brought the universe up to a large but finite temperature and density,” says Paul Steinhardt of Princeton University, who came up with the concept. “The rest of the story is as the Big Bang model would have it, but the beginning is different.”

“Quantum effects cause the incoming three-dimensional world to ripple along the extra-dimension prior to collision so that the collision occurs in some places at slightly different times than others. By the time the collision is complete, the rippling leads to small variations in temperature, which seed temperature fluctuations in the microwave background and the formation of galaxies. We have shown that the spectrum of energy density fluctuations is scale-invariant (the same amplitude on all scales). The production of a scale-invariant spectrum from hyperexpansion was one of the great triumphs of inflationary theory, and here we have repeated the feat using completely different physics.”

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7 Crazy Theories About Life The Universe Everything

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16 August, 2013 – The Life and Times of Mark Stothard

16 Aug

Today we begin a new series of articles which will feature write-ups, interviews and videos about excellent photographers that Kevin and Michael have met in their travels around the world.

These are not famous people, and you likely heavn’t heard of them. Many are unpublished. But they are fascinating, talented, hard working, and probably like you, passionate about their photography.

We begin the series with Mark Stothard, from Australia.

"Having been to Antarctica with Michael and Kevin, I would say after having traveled the world and shot nearly my entire life as an exhibiting photographer,  it was one of my highlights in my life and I talk about it, all the time.  The images and experience of seeing something visionary and nearly extinct from the world, to see and experience the wildlife and scenery that does not fear humans is amazing.  The images I shot there won me two Smithsonian awards and nearly 18 other international awards". – Tim Wolcott

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These Expeditions Will Sell Out Quickly. They Always Do

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The Luminous Landscape – What’s New

 
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A Day in the Life of the KKK: Anthony Karen talks trust & photojournalism

15 Aug

5.jpg.CROP.original-original.jpg

Photographer Anthony Karen has built a career around gaining access to ostensibly inaccessible societies. After a trip to Haiti documenting Vodou rituals, he has gone on to photograph white supremacist groups, the infamous Westboro Baptist Church and the Ku Klux Klan. His compelling photos and unrestricted access to the KKK resulted in a collaboration with the Discovery Channel, and slate.com has published an interesting profile of his work, in which he explains his approach. Click through for extracts, and some of his compelling images. 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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