Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Unique Photographic Techniques

 

Wow.

A completely unique way of using light to make photographs. And in my view – these images are beautiful.

Robert Buelteman works indoors in total darkness, forsaking cameras, lenses, and computers for jumper cables, fiber optics, and 80,000 volts of electricity. This bizarre union of Dr. Frankenstein and Georgia O’Keeffe spawns photos that seem to portray the life force of his subjects as the very process destroys them.

Buelteman begins by painstakingly whittling down flowers, leaves, sprigs, and twigs with a scalpel until they’re translucent. He then lays each specimen on color transparency film and, for a more detailed effect, covers it with a diffusion screen. This assemblage is placed on his “easel”—a piece of sheet metal sandwiched between Plexiglas, floating in liquid silicone. Buelteman hits everything with an electric pulse and the electrons do a dance as they leap from the sheet metal, through the silicone and the plant (and hopefully not through him), while heading back out the jumper cables. In that moment, the gas surrounding the subject is ionized, leaving behind ethereal coronas. He then hand-paints the result with white light shining through an optical fiber the width of a human hair, a process so tricky each image can take up to 150 attempts.

Again . . .  Wow.

 

 

Hiding

 

These images are just down-right beautiful, not to mention clever, thought-provoking and technically excellent.

The author of all this inspiring work is Peruvian artist, Cecilia Paredes who currently lives and works between San Jose, Costa Rica and Philadelphia.  Her artistic career began as a painter but her creative concepts evolved, revealing themselves first in three-dimensional objects, then through photography. This work is a series of self portraits where Paredes paints her own body to blend in with the background.

 

Fantastic stuff!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Exteriors.

 

It’s a trick that is often employed by interior photographers – to take the products ‘outside’. Nothing wildly new there. But the trick is to do it well and even with an element of mystery.

Since 2005, conceptual artist Rune Guneriussen has been working on site specific projects in Norway that combine installation and photography. Most of his installations are not seen by an audience, only photographed.

Inspiring stuff.

 

Old Tree

Really missing those beautiful crisp shadows that summer light (normally) provides. I’m bored of the rain and the grey skies now.
Caught this incredible shadow a couple of months ago (surprisingly not in England!!) It seems to have a life and personality all of its own.

Trove

I recently came across these brilliant designs by New York – based Trove. Artists Randall Buck and Jee Levin launched their first collection of papers and wall-coverings back in 2006 & their work can be found in Nobu and The Smyth Hotel in New York.

A nice twist on a traditional format.

Tessa Farmer

An incredible piece by Tessa Farmer at the Saatchi gallery. Beautiful and macabre
( . . . but you need to look closely)

Tradition

What a pleasure it is to know that traditional craftsmanship and profitability are not mutually exclusive.
I used to be a little bit cynical about this. I thought that computer-aided design had taken over. Productivity
and affordability had beaten hand-made, non-mechanised quality into submission.
Take architectural mouldings, cornices and plaster-works for example. It’s just the sort of craft that we marvel at in the stately homes and monuments of old – mourning its demise and absence today.
‘You could never build that now’ . . . ‘too expensive’ . . . ‘skills don’t exist anymore’ etc. etc.

So nice then to be shooting for a company that proves me wrong. ‘Stevensons of Norwich’ use exactly those hand-made, delicate skills that I often feared lost.
Their perfectionism and creativity doesn’t get in the way of productivity – and surprise surprise – they are world renowned in their field.

Brilliant.

Fairlyte

What can I say that can possibly do justice to the work of Melissa White?
Melissa operates under the trading name, ‘Fairlyte, Hand Painted Interiors‘, which although it describes what she does – it doesn’t quite explain the beauty of her incredible fresco seccos. These simple, yet stunning pieces emulate the age and patina of ancient frescos that one might expect to find in, say, The British Museum, The Louvre or The Met.

What luck, then that Melissa sells her work for a (relative) bargain, and takes commissions for bespoke work (Fairlyte shop).

I’ll let the images do the talking.

Fairlyte 1
Fairlyte 2
Fairlyte 3

Lambs Conduit Street

Lambs Conduit Christmas shopping

If you want some inspiration combined with a little retail therapy – then drop into the Lambs Conduit Christmas Shopping Evening.

Sounds like I’m doing their PR – I’m not!  It very easy to flag a bit when trying to buy Christmas presents at this time of year. The rush, the lack of time, the horrible bright flashy high-street stores all plugging their wares.

Lambs Conduit Street is the antithesis of all that. It’s a small area of great independent character which you feel London should have much more of. It’s where you should tell your’out-of-town’ friends to head for . . . .  a little London destination to be proud of.

My favourite place in this small oasis is Ben Pentreath’s cleverly titled home store . . . ‘Ben Pentreath Ltd.

Last time Ben opened his doors for the evening was to launch his unique and brilliant’Cabinet of Curiosities’ – a selling exhibition of ecclectic objects that you never knew you needed (until you walked through his door!) That night – the whole street seemed to join in the fun which spilled out into a kind of impromptu street party. Let’s hope it’s the same  tonight!

Cab Night

Blue bottles

Did a shoot recently at Voewood House in Norfolk. Beautiful, quirky Arts and Crafts building. I know it’s been featured in one or two shoots

so I couldn’t resist going ‘off-piste’ a bit and creating this ‘bowling alley’. The place has such beautiful, subtle light.