Showing posts with label Urban Photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Urban Photography. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Creative Urban Photography by Maria Luz Bravo

Maria Luz Bravo

María Luz Bravo is very talented street photographer, who was born in Puebla, México 1975.The María’s photography show streets, parks and buildings all without a single human in sight.

Maria Luz Bravo2
Maria Luz Bravo3
Maria Luz Bravo4
Maria Luz Bravo5
Maria Luz Bravo6
Maria Luz Bravo7
Maria Luz Bravo8
Maria Luz Bravo9
Maria Luz Bravo10
Maria Luz Bravo11
Maria Luz Bravo12
Maria Luz Bravo13
Maria Luz Bravo14
Maria Luz Bravo15
Maria Luz Bravo16

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Feels like Home by Marcos Calamato


These eerie furniture photographs are the works of photographer and graphic designer Marcos Calamato. The photo series consists of a chair, a television and a lamp on a side table. Shot in a dark red tone, these photos convey a sense of mystery and fright.












Friday, February 4, 2011

Dark Lens by Cedric Delsaux


Cedric Delsaux lives and works in Paris, France. After studying cinematography and journalism, he worked as a bookseller and then as a conceptual-editor in an advertising agency. He has been a full-time photographer since 2003.




Delsaux won the Kodak prize for landscapes and architecture with his "Star Wars on Earth" series in 2005, and has seen his career as an artist grow ever since. He has been selected to work on several large automobile advertising campaigns, including Volkswagen, Touareg, Peugeot, Renault Espace, Citroen, Skoda, Adrexo, EDF, Viking and SFR. Delsaux was also selected in the Luerzer's Archive as one of the "200 Best Ad Photographers Worldwide" in 2006.

Cedric questions our relationship to the world, he creates a new time frame where all boundaries are blurred, between reality and fiction, madness and sanity, where the past and the future are trapped in the present. His work challenges our relationship with time and space, forcing us to reflect on our perception. Elements of our common visual memory, holding a different relationship with every human being, inhabit each of his series.