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Tiffany Nicholson

Antioquia, Choco

COLUMBIA — The photographic series Antioquia, Choco documents my four-month trip in Colombia. During this trip, I mostly stayed in these two different places and some of the images were shot during the lockdown in a natural reserve near the Panama border. I am used to travelling slowly and it takes me a lot of time to get in the mood for photographing. I really need to connect with the environment before taking out my camera.

The experience was a huge immersion inside wild nature and rurality. Likewise, the images depict an abounding and generous greenery, while illustrating an elementary way-of-life. Between panoramic landscapes and infinite views, some closer shots reveal natural small details. I experiment visual interaction between elements and textures: palm trees scratching the sunny sky, an old tree trunk drilling the calm river surface, water drops dancing on a leaf in a muggy heat…

Besides those unplanned images of nourishing earth, I also composed still lives which decelerate the rhythm of the series and offer a calm interlude. These shots associate raw materials and craft tools with delicate fruits, enhancing their shapes’ beauty and soft tints. I hope the images reflect the intimate connection I had with the subjects and the area, and that it gives a feeling of appeasement and some kind of resourcing loneliness. 

José Javier Serrano

Yosigo

The photographer and designer José Javier Serrano (Donostia, 1981), better known artistically as Yosigo, is a young artist from San Sebastian who has achieved a new way of looking at and facing landscapes and places that we inhabit everyday but are often unable to take away his value and aesthetic strength – or if we do, we do it conventionally.

Yosigo manages with his photographs to give a turn to what «normally we see» and to take us to its unmistakable terrain and particular vision of its surroundings.

The look of Yosigo (composition, chromatism, chosen elements …) is what gives his proposal a nontransferable personality, completely recognizable by his way of doing, which is without doubt one of the indispensable requirements to differentiate himself from the rest of the artistic proposals and get what is so petulantly used in the literary field and defined as «own voice.»

In addition, his passion for photography does not hide another of his passions (also his form of sustenance): graphic design. He himself has recognized in some interview that this taste for graphic design has influenced, at least to date, how to face the composition of many of his photographs, where straight lines and symmetry are part of his photographic personality and that directly influence when composing his photographs and in the same design of his exhibitions. Undoubtedly, we are dealing with the work of a singular and very personal photographer.

Credits

Photography · YOSIGO
www.yosigo.es
www.instagram.com/yosigo_yosigo

TJ Tambellini

Eastern Air

These photos are all taken in and around the Eastern Sierras region of California. The state has so much to offer and crowds often gather at the coasts or along the western edge of the Sierras, with Yosemite and Sequoias as a destination. While those areas are just as special, I often gravitate towards the high desert, or in this case, the east side of the range. It’s an easy shot up from LA, using Hwy 395 as the main drag. You could spend a lifetime traveling through its deep desert Mojave region, the active thermal zones, or taking a quick jaunt up into the mountains from the many fingerling roads that splinter off from 395. I often look back at my personal videos or photos from the area as a quick escape, more so now in quarantine times.  

Processed with VSCO with j6 preset

Credits

Photography and words TJ TAMBELLINI
www.tj-tambellini.com
www.instagram.com/thisisnow_here

Arnaud Montagard

Ferry Tale

A look into New-York based French photographer Arnaud Montagard’s photo series taken in Japan

Credits

Photography · Arnaud Montagard
www.arnaudmontagard.com
www.instagram.com/arnaudmontagard

Caleb Stein

Down by The Hudson

‘Down by the Hudson’ (2016-2019) is my ode to Poughkeepsie, a small town in upstate New York. For years I walked obsessively throughout Poughkeepsie, in particular along a three-mile stretch of its Main Street. I grew up in big cities and my conception of small American towns came from things like Norman Rockwell illustrations, so I wanted to see how my photographs matched up with those inherited, almost mythologized ideas of Americanness.

Poughkeepsie used to be home to one of IBM’s main headquarters, but in the early 1990’s they downsized and left thousands of people unemployed. Today there are still several buildings which remain abandoned. In this way Poughkeepsie is like countless other small American towns that have struggled with deindustrialization and outsourcing. After the 2016 elections, there was a palpable tension as I walked along Main Street. The elections were almost neck and neck in Dutchess County, to the point where you could have practically fit the difference into a crowded bar on a Saturday night. This heated political moment marked a turning point for this project. It wasn’t only about understanding this mythologized conception of America, but it was also about grappling with this conflict through photography.

It was during this time that I started going to the watering hole, an Eden tucked away behind the local drive-in movie theater on the outskirts of town. The watering hole became a central component of the project because it represented an idyllic space where people from all walks of life came together and let their guard down. The more time I spent at the watering hole, the more I wanted to convey the struggles and beauties of this town with care and tenderness.

Credits

Photography and Words · CALEB STEIN
www.caleb-stein.com
www.instagram.com/cjbstein

Tiffany Nicholson

The Wonders We Seek are Inside Us

Credits

Photography · TIFFANY NICHOLSON
www.tdnphoto.com
www.instagram.com/tdnphoto

Michele Yong

Ellinor

Team

Photography · MICHELE YONG
Fashion · MIREY ENVEROVA
Art Direction · Laura Gavry
Creative Direction · NIMA HABIBZADEH and JADE REMOVILLE
Hair · MAYU MORIMOTO
Make-Up · MIKI MATSUNAGA
Model · ELLINOR from NEW MADISON
Photo Assistant · DENISE CHONG


Designers

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  3. Bra DE PINO Trousers ISSEY MIYAKE
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Gustavo Minas

This was my first time in the US and in NYC, a place I literally dreamed about photographing. My mind was full of remarkable images by great street photographers who have roamed these streets before me. Although I had some preconceived ideas and mental images of the city, exploring an unknown place with a camera is always a great discovery. Little by little, stereotypes fall into pieces, and you start creating your own imaginary map of it. You reinvent the city, and by doing so, you reinvent yourself a little too. This process is always exciting, and this excitement can be overwhelming sometimes. In the first two nights, I couldn’t sleep even being too tired, as my mind couldn’t stop thinking about what I’d find the next morning – and if the weather would be good and give me some light to play with. I’d wake up around 6h30, get some cheap coffee and a croissant, and walk, walk, walk, apparently aimlessly, trying to make sense, with my images, of this wonderful mix of chaos, energy, and flux. I’m aware I just scratched the surface of this deep world, and this feeling just makes me want to come back for more.

Ed Freeman

«I don’t deal in messages and meanings; my job is ask questions, not to answer them»

There is an otherworldly quality to Ed Freeman’s images of buildings, where hangovers of the twentieth century, such as motel signs and fast food joints, are captured within a desolate environment. This is deliberate, as Freeman resituates iconic elements of the American Dream within a digitally-configured landscape he has careful created. By inserting different landmarks into the same, but nevertheless slightly altered setting, Freeman challenges the viewer to look more closely at the subject matter, and in turn, at the built environment proper. Freeman’s imagined scenes take on a more obvious appearance in his series of dreamlike underwater nudes. What seem, at first glance, as painterly visions of figures gliding deep below the sea, are, on closer inspection, derived from photographs taken of models shot in a swimming pool. Digital enhancement and manipulation drives Freeman’s work, and by immersing the viewer in this constructed world, the qualities that make up the ‘real world’ return to the fore.

How does your work capture emotion in a way that non-manipulated photography cannot?

Non-manipulated photography is unmatched for capturing emotion. What I can do with manipulation is remove elements that distract from that emotion, modify lighting to enhance that emotion. It’s difficult or impossible to invent emotion where none existed before.

Do you envision the final outcome of an image when you’re taking photographs prior to editing?

Absolutely. When I look in the viewfinder, I see what’s in front of the lens, but I also see what the final print looks like. I’m always very conscious of what I can and cannot do in post-production. When I’m photographing old buildings and I know I’m going to erase the surrounding structures, I’m careful to shoot some nearby empty land to fill in the parts that I’m going to erase. When I’m photographing underwater nudes, I think, “that was an almost perfect body shot. Her eyes were closed, but there’s that great facial expression I shot five minutes ago. I think I can splice that head onto this body. And maybe I have a better foot someplace; I’d better check.”

What is the importance for you in documenting the landmarks of a bygone era in the Realty series; What do you want the viewer to take from them?

Viewers can take from my pictures whatever they want; it’s not my job to control their experience. But for me, these old buildings are part nostalgia and part a commentary on the death of the American Dream. I grew up in a time when America was an optimistic land of opportunity. Now it seems to have devolved into a land of xenophobia, racism, polarization and paranoia. These crumbling buildings hark back to a simpler, happier past and by extension, maybe point the way to a happier, albeit less naive future.

Similarly, many of the buildings you have photographed have since disappeared, so what can they tell us about the present and the future?

Everything changes, everything ages and evolves. Today’s hip will be tomorrow’s kitsch, next year’s laughing stock and next generation’s quaint gem waiting to be discovered and revived. That has forever been true yet each generation has to learn it for themselves.

«For me the solution is to be passionately invested in the present, fascinated with the future and at the same time know and love the past – sort of the same way you know and love your goldfish.»

What draws you to the themes you explore?

Well, first of all, I’ve always liked the way people look without their clothes on. I’d probably be a nudist if I weren’t such a prude. That pretty much explains the underwater nudes. Other than that, I have no insights to offer.

«I’m interested in EVERYTHING and if I had enough time, I’d photograph everything. Thank God I don’t because my filing system is complicated enough as it is.»

Visually, the Underwater and Realty series could not seem more different, but are there any shared meanings in them?

I don’t deal in messages and meanings; my job is ask questions, not to answer them. Sort of analogous to the chef who might say, “my job is to prepare food, not to eat it.”

Your practice hinges upon digital photography and manipulation; Do you think that over time it will be recognized as its own medium? 

Identifying what I do as distinct from traditional photography is not particularly important to me, but I think it is to people who collect photography – they have a legitimate right to know how much manipulation, if any, has been done to an image. Any serious collector of mid-century photography knows that Ansel Adams used every darkroom trick in the book to refine his images, whereas Edward Weston was a purist who never did any modification to his. They both made stunning works of art. These days, we have more ways to manipulate pictures than Ansel ever dreamed of. I’m not sure we have to invent a new term for altered photographs, but we certainly have to be upfront about what goes into the finished picture. Some people look down their noses at extensive manipulation, but most (including me, obviously) just see it as one option among many in contemporary photography. Any technology, including Photoshop, can be used to create art. “Whether or not it’s a great novel depends on the writer, not the typewriter.”

Credits

www.edfreeman.com/collections

Aëla Labbé

Apparition Disparition

Apparition Disparition is a series of photographs that belong to a larger multi-disciplinary ongoing project called MOSI (meaning moss in Icelandic). MOSI was initiated in 2016 by french photographer Aëla Labbé and icelandic choreographer Bára Sigfúsdóttir in collaboration with norwegian composer Eivind Lønning and french performer Stéphane Imbert. Body, space, instincts, nature, flesh, soil, sound, rock, breath, softness, matter, water, presence, time, landscape, air. In search of connections between what is visible and invisible.

Apparition Disparition was created in Mývatnssveit, Iceland during May/June 2016 and July 2018.

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