Patricia Ackerman: Intercepted Spaces

About her "Intercepted Spaces" project Patricia Ackerman says:  The architecture is defined as the art of projecting spaces, spaces in which the human being lives, but it is on the outside where it carries most of its activities, it is for this reason that the man has been dedicated to finding...

Rafal Michalak: Shame

SHAME is a photographic series of a performative and experimental character. In his works the author explores psychological and emotional aspects of a human being seeking their own identity in the ever-changing world. He is particularly interested in the phenomenon of psychological transgression as the tendency to expand and to...

Vassilis Konstantinou & Babis Kougemitros: Southern Province

These pictures are the outcome of a three-year photographic wandering of two photographers –Vassilis Konstantinou and Babis Kougemitros– in their places of origin: the provinces of Achaia and Arcadia respectively. In the context of this wandering, the photographers direct their gaze and lens to things simultaneously familiar and unfamiliar, focusing...

PhotoBiography: Stephen Shore

Stephen Shore (born October 8, 1947) is an American photographer known for his images of banal scenes and objects in the United States, and for his pioneering use of color in art photography. In 2010, Shore received an Honorary Fellowship from The Royal Photographic Society. Stephen Shore was born as...

Denis Esakov: Spying on Moscow. A Winged Guide to Architecture

A pedestrian in the city sees buildings in the context of the city landscape, with the façades as main attraction. Architects and engineers are focused on construction and design, and urbanists consider individual buildings solely as elements of the city complex. Thus the angle of observation influences the reception of...

Owen Harvey: Ground Clearance

In the mid-to-late 1940’s a new subculture in America emerged and grew during the post war prosperity of the 1950’s. Young Latino youths had been known to place sandbags in their custom vehicles, so that the body of their car would ride close to the road; “slow and low” being...

Teo Becher: Tuk Time

Tuk Time is simply the story of a small inuvialuit village on the North-Western coast of Canada, Tuktoyaktuk. Tuk Time stands for the moment when inhabitants start their daily life - around 12pm as unemployment is high - but also for that moment when the ice pack starts to melt...

Michael Jantzen: Interventions

Interventions is a series of photomontages from Michael Jantzen that are created with images of some of his built and un-built structures. These images are superimposed into various real world landscapes in order to inspire stories in the minds of the viewers, about what these things are, and how they...

Baerbel Reinhard: Space Equal to Itself Which Rises or Denies Itself

space equal to itself which rises or denies itself Mallarmé “Aby Warburg’s Mnemosyne-Atlas is an unfinished attempt to map the pathways that give art history and cosmography their pathos-laden meanings. Warburg thought this visual, metaphoric encyclopedia, with its constellations of symbolic images, would animate the viewer’s memory, imagination, and understanding...

PhotoBiography: Thomas Struth

Thomas Struth (born 1954) is a German photographer who is best known for his Museum Photographs, family portraits and 1970s black and white photographs of the streets of Düsseldorf and New York. Struth currently lives and works in Berlin and New York. Born to ceramic potter Gisela Struth and bank...