Jakub Polomski: Iceland Aerial Landscapes

In July 2015 during two weeks time Polish photographer Jakub Polomski drove 4000 km including seaside and interior. For taking photos he was using both DSLR and drone with built-in camera. Iceland is unique land, however some locations look really abstractive in the bird’s eye view. All photos were captured by drone with...

Kilian Schönberger: The Crooked Forest

This pine grove is one of the most unusual forests in Central Europe. The so-called Crooked Forest (Polish: Krzywy Las) is a grove of oddly-shaped pine trees located outside Gryfino, West Pomerania, Poland. The grove was planted around 1930, when its location was still within the German province of Pomerania....

Reuben Wu: Lux Noctis

Lux Nocti is a series of photographs depicting landscapes of North America within the framework of traditional landscape photography but influenced by ideas of planetary exploration,19th century sublime romantic painting, and science fiction. We are overwhelmed everyday by beautiful images of the familiar. Reuben Wu imagines these scenes transformed into undiscovered landscapes which...

Peter Boel: Scandinavian Landscapes

Peter Boel, fine art and advertising photographer from Copehhagen, Denmark, took a 6 weeks and 8000 km long roat trip through Norway flying to Svalbard & returning through Finland & Sweden. In result he shows stunning gallery of landscape photographs showing uniqe beauty of these hard to rich areas. Website: standardfoto.net

Herbert Böttcher: Panoramic Seascapes

Herbert Böttcher was born in 1962 in Rietberg. He lives in Düsseldorf, Germany and works as a freelance photographer since 1993. His photographic focus includes the conception and realization of photo projects for companies, exhibitions and publications. Both, his free and applied works are presented as a series in numerous...

Tamas Dezso: NOTES FOR AN EPILOGUE

Spiritual tradition and physical heritage are simultaneously disintegrating in Romania. Time is beginning to undermine centuries-old traditions preserved in tiny villages, in communities of only a few houses, as well as the bastions of the communist era’s enforced industrialisation, which became part and parcel of Romania’s recent history. Those living...