Kellner is a German fine-arts photographer. Kellner's work shows us segments of an image which in turn create a full image when placed together. He doesn't deconstruct the image but reconstructs it on our eyes.
Kellner uses the traditional film photography to create his montages. He normally using a whole roll of film and tasks pictures of famous landmarks from different angles creating a more abstract unique feeling to his montages. |
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Nicholas Kennedy Sittton is a photographer based in San Francisco. Sitton states that the images create a sense of falling into itself, like capturing a moment of demolition. I can destroy titanous steel structures with the click of a mouse and create new twisted versions of reality. I was also inspired by San Francisco. I had just moved here and being a new city was disorienting and exciting and I wanted to capture how my whole world had changed.” The way in which he presents his photos is unique.
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Myoung Ho Lee, a young artist from South Korea, has produced an elaborate series of photographs that pose some unusual questions about representation, reality, art, environment and seeing.
Simple in concept, complex in execution, he makes us look at a tree in its natural surroundings, but separates the tree artificially from nature by presenting it on an immense white ground, as one would see a painting or photograph on a billboard. |
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Simon Phipps, born in Leeds, is an artist based In London. He is a graduate in sculpture from the Royal College of Art and a renowned photographer of post-war modernist architecture. For this task I took inspiration from Phipps brutalist buildings.
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The Brutalism project is a collaboration with Black Dragon press about Brutalism architecture in London. He turns photographs that he has taken in to simplified images in Photoshop and then in turns creates screen prints of his creations.
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Quirk is an artist who specializes in photo realistic watercolours and painting what the camera can’t capture (above). Danny explains his work by saying, “My work is perceivably on the darker side, but the actually is, it’s about exploration. His anatomical works combine classic poses, in dramatic chiaroscuro lighting, with a very contemporary twist… illustrating what’s underneath the skin, and the portrayed figure dissects a region of their body to show the structures that lay beneath.” Using liquid latex, acrylic paint, and Sharpies, Quirk also creates realistic drawings directly on the human body to reveal the human anatomy inside (right).Quirk‘s mission is to bring medical textbooks to life. We are trying to replicate this using photoshop.
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