/tagged/photography/page/2

[O]n the right side I spot a parochial native of Santiago de Chile, a government or bank official, clerk or bureaucrat, a good man who has never left Chile, his little hat says as much, startled as he walks through Hyde Park with a stern look on his face (though his sternness is of the most helpless variety), as if he were thinking abstruse thoughts. On the left side of the picture a girl, possibly a nanny, pushes a baby carriage that isn’t seen: only the handle appears in the frame. This girl is English: her eyes gaze at the carriage that I can’t see and the child who I can’t see, but by the expression on her face it’s clear that she’s elsewhere, a much warmer place, the tropic of geometric forms, the tropic of geometric exiles. The photograph doesn’t end with these two figures, who actually only frame it and thereby give it a twist: between the Luciferian nanny and the parochial Chilean from Santiago, but further in the distance, a couple stroll arm in arm toward the photographer and foreground, which thus becomes a promise of the future, as if the fate of that ideal (and eminently British) couple were the peripatetic Chilean and the baby we can’t see and the baby’s questionable caretaker. But even here the photograph doesn’t end (because this photograph and maybe all photographs have a beginning and an end, though as a general rule we never know for sure what they are), or the staging of the scene doesn’t end: in the background there are three tiny silhouettes, this time in the exact center of the lens, three silhouettes poised at the point where the placid Hyde Park path merges with the horizon, silhouettes that may either be approaching Larrain’s camera or moving away from it, probably approaching, three silhouettes that are like three black holes or like three tiny scratches in the fateful serenity (and clarity) of this photograph.

Roberto Bolaño, describing Sergio Larrain’s photo in Between Parentheses

[O]n the right side I spot a parochial native of Santiago de Chile, a government or bank official, clerk or bureaucrat, a good man who has never left Chile, his little hat says as much, startled as he walks through Hyde Park with a stern look on his face (though his sternness is of the most helpless variety), as if he were thinking abstruse thoughts. On the left side of the picture a girl, possibly a nanny, pushes a baby carriage that isn’t seen: only the handle appears in the frame. This girl is English: her eyes gaze at the carriage that I can’t see and the child who I can’t see, but by the expression on her face it’s clear that she’s elsewhere, a much warmer place, the tropic of geometric forms, the tropic of geometric exiles. The photograph doesn’t end with these two figures, who actually only frame it and thereby give it a twist: between the Luciferian nanny and the parochial Chilean from Santiago, but further in the distance, a couple stroll arm in arm toward the photographer and foreground, which thus becomes a promise of the future, as if the fate of that ideal (and eminently British) couple were the peripatetic Chilean and the baby we can’t see and the baby’s questionable caretaker. But even here the photograph doesn’t end (because this photograph and maybe all photographs have a beginning and an end, though as a general rule we never know for sure what they are), or the staging of the scene doesn’t end: in the background there are three tiny silhouettes, this time in the exact center of the lens, three silhouettes poised at the point where the placid Hyde Park path merges with the horizon, silhouettes that may either be approaching Larrain’s camera or moving away from it, probably approaching, three silhouettes that are like three black holes or like three tiny scratches in the fateful serenity (and clarity) of this photograph.

Roberto Bolaño, describing Sergio Larrain’s photo in Between Parentheses

A Russian photographer, Lana Sator, snuck into a missile factory. And this is what it looks like. 

A Russian photographer, Lana Sator, snuck into a missile factory. And this is what it looks like. 

timelightbox:

Photographer John Francis Peters explores Morocco’s current landscape, both environmental and social. See more here. 

Wow

timelightbox:

Photographer John Francis Peters explores Morocco’s current landscape, both environmental and social. See more here

Wow

danielholter:

omnicurious:

Between the years of 2003 and 2010, Murray Fredericks made sixteen solo journeys to the featureless surface of Lake Eyre, a usually dry salt pan in the Australian Outback.

Immersed in ‘pure space’, Fredericks camped alone in the centre of the lake photographing a ‘landscape without landscape’ for up to five weeks at a time. The solitude, simplicity and repetition of the days, created an approach that was integral to the production of the images.

The photographs were produced on a traditional 8” x 10” film plate camera and exhibited as large digital pigment prints on cotton rag.

Simply breathtaking…

Whoa.

Stunning and a little awe-inspiring in a very literal sense.

(via apoplecticskeptic)

thiscitycalledearth:

by Tom Kondrat, Hackney, 8th August 11.

thiscitycalledearth:

by Tom Kondrat, Hackney, 8th August 11.

steveflow:

Rainbow from my garden

Shit bro, good work

steveflow:

Rainbow from my garden

Shit bro, good work

david:

Purported photos of an unknown ICBM facility in Russia

This location has apparently garnered interest from enthusiasts who noticed the location obscured or unavailable on public and private satellite images.

(I love this shit.)

Awesome.

(via soupsoup)

kateoplis:

David Plowden has documented America’s vanishing landscapes for five decades, describing himself as “an archeologist with a camera” who has spent his life “one step ahead of the wrecking ball.” 

 “I have been beset, with a sense of urgency to record those parts of our heritage which seem to be receding as quickly as the view from the rear of a speeding train. I fear that we are eradicating the evidence of our past accomplishments so quickly that in time we may well lose the sense of who we are.”

Here’s a small sampler from his stunning online collection of nearly 2,000 prints:

1. Statue of Liberty from Caven Point Road, 1967

2. World Trade Center from Johnson Avenue, 1972

3. Yaquina Bay Bridge, 1968

4. Golden Valley, North Dakota, 1971 

5. Gotebo, Oklahoma, 1969

6. Erie-Lackawanna Railroad, westbound Phoebe Snow, 1964

(via theatlantic)

aliciakennedy:

(via Fotos de escritor: la verdad de la pose « Eterna Cadencia)
Maybe you knew this already, but I didn’t until reading this post: Argentine photographer Daniel Mordzinski has taken all your favorite pictures of Latin American writers (and others). There’s Aira (above), Borges, Casares, Bolaño, and my favorite picture of Junot Díaz. His site is here.

So cool.

aliciakennedy:

(via Fotos de escritor: la verdad de la pose « Eterna Cadencia)

Maybe you knew this already, but I didn’t until reading this post: Argentine photographer Daniel Mordzinski has taken all your favorite pictures of Latin American writers (and others). There’s Aira (above), Borges, Casares, Bolaño, and my favorite picture of Junot Díaz. His site is here.

So cool.

(via aliciakennedy-deactivated201108)

(Source: kateoplis)


[O]n the right side I spot a parochial native of Santiago de Chile, a government or bank official, clerk or bureaucrat, a good man who has never left Chile, his little hat says as much, startled as he walks through Hyde Park with a stern look on his face (though his sternness is of the most helpless variety), as if he were thinking abstruse thoughts. On the left side of the picture a girl, possibly a nanny, pushes a baby carriage that isn’t seen: only the handle appears in the frame. This girl is English: her eyes gaze at the carriage that I can’t see and the child who I can’t see, but by the expression on her face it’s clear that she’s elsewhere, a much warmer place, the tropic of geometric forms, the tropic of geometric exiles. The photograph doesn’t end with these two figures, who actually only frame it and thereby give it a twist: between the Luciferian nanny and the parochial Chilean from Santiago, but further in the distance, a couple stroll arm in arm toward the photographer and foreground, which thus becomes a promise of the future, as if the fate of that ideal (and eminently British) couple were the peripatetic Chilean and the baby we can’t see and the baby’s questionable caretaker. But even here the photograph doesn’t end (because this photograph and maybe all photographs have a beginning and an end, though as a general rule we never know for sure what they are), or the staging of the scene doesn’t end: in the background there are three tiny silhouettes, this time in the exact center of the lens, three silhouettes poised at the point where the placid Hyde Park path merges with the horizon, silhouettes that may either be approaching Larrain’s camera or moving away from it, probably approaching, three silhouettes that are like three black holes or like three tiny scratches in the fateful serenity (and clarity) of this photograph.

Roberto Bolaño, describing Sergio Larrain’s photo in Between Parentheses

[O]n the right side I spot a parochial native of Santiago de Chile, a government or bank official, clerk or bureaucrat, a good man who has never left Chile, his little hat says as much, startled as he walks through Hyde Park with a stern look on his face (though his sternness is of the most helpless variety), as if he were thinking abstruse thoughts. On the left side of the picture a girl, possibly a nanny, pushes a baby carriage that isn’t seen: only the handle appears in the frame. This girl is English: her eyes gaze at the carriage that I can’t see and the child who I can’t see, but by the expression on her face it’s clear that she’s elsewhere, a much warmer place, the tropic of geometric forms, the tropic of geometric exiles. The photograph doesn’t end with these two figures, who actually only frame it and thereby give it a twist: between the Luciferian nanny and the parochial Chilean from Santiago, but further in the distance, a couple stroll arm in arm toward the photographer and foreground, which thus becomes a promise of the future, as if the fate of that ideal (and eminently British) couple were the peripatetic Chilean and the baby we can’t see and the baby’s questionable caretaker. But even here the photograph doesn’t end (because this photograph and maybe all photographs have a beginning and an end, though as a general rule we never know for sure what they are), or the staging of the scene doesn’t end: in the background there are three tiny silhouettes, this time in the exact center of the lens, three silhouettes poised at the point where the placid Hyde Park path merges with the horizon, silhouettes that may either be approaching Larrain’s camera or moving away from it, probably approaching, three silhouettes that are like three black holes or like three tiny scratches in the fateful serenity (and clarity) of this photograph.

Roberto Bolaño, describing Sergio Larrain’s photo in Between Parentheses

A Russian photographer, Lana Sator, snuck into a missile factory. And this is what it looks like. 

A Russian photographer, Lana Sator, snuck into a missile factory. And this is what it looks like. 

timelightbox:

Photographer John Francis Peters explores Morocco’s current landscape, both environmental and social. See more here. 

Wow

timelightbox:

Photographer John Francis Peters explores Morocco’s current landscape, both environmental and social. See more here

Wow

danielholter:

omnicurious:

Between the years of 2003 and 2010, Murray Fredericks made sixteen solo journeys to the featureless surface of Lake Eyre, a usually dry salt pan in the Australian Outback.

Immersed in ‘pure space’, Fredericks camped alone in the centre of the lake photographing a ‘landscape without landscape’ for up to five weeks at a time. The solitude, simplicity and repetition of the days, created an approach that was integral to the production of the images.

The photographs were produced on a traditional 8” x 10” film plate camera and exhibited as large digital pigment prints on cotton rag.

Simply breathtaking…

Whoa.

Stunning and a little awe-inspiring in a very literal sense.

(via apoplecticskeptic)

thiscitycalledearth:

by Tom Kondrat, Hackney, 8th August 11.

thiscitycalledearth:

by Tom Kondrat, Hackney, 8th August 11.

steveflow:

Rainbow from my garden

Shit bro, good work

steveflow:

Rainbow from my garden

Shit bro, good work

david:

Purported photos of an unknown ICBM facility in Russia

This location has apparently garnered interest from enthusiasts who noticed the location obscured or unavailable on public and private satellite images.

(I love this shit.)

Awesome.

(via soupsoup)

kateoplis:

David Plowden has documented America’s vanishing landscapes for five decades, describing himself as “an archeologist with a camera” who has spent his life “one step ahead of the wrecking ball.” 

 “I have been beset, with a sense of urgency to record those parts of our heritage which seem to be receding as quickly as the view from the rear of a speeding train. I fear that we are eradicating the evidence of our past accomplishments so quickly that in time we may well lose the sense of who we are.”

Here’s a small sampler from his stunning online collection of nearly 2,000 prints:

1. Statue of Liberty from Caven Point Road, 1967

2. World Trade Center from Johnson Avenue, 1972

3. Yaquina Bay Bridge, 1968

4. Golden Valley, North Dakota, 1971 

5. Gotebo, Oklahoma, 1969

6. Erie-Lackawanna Railroad, westbound Phoebe Snow, 1964

(via theatlantic)

aliciakennedy:

(via Fotos de escritor: la verdad de la pose « Eterna Cadencia)
Maybe you knew this already, but I didn’t until reading this post: Argentine photographer Daniel Mordzinski has taken all your favorite pictures of Latin American writers (and others). There’s Aira (above), Borges, Casares, Bolaño, and my favorite picture of Junot Díaz. His site is here.

So cool.

aliciakennedy:

(via Fotos de escritor: la verdad de la pose « Eterna Cadencia)

Maybe you knew this already, but I didn’t until reading this post: Argentine photographer Daniel Mordzinski has taken all your favorite pictures of Latin American writers (and others). There’s Aira (above), Borges, Casares, Bolaño, and my favorite picture of Junot Díaz. His site is here.

So cool.

(via aliciakennedy-deactivated201108)

About:

A collection of literature, film, politics, music and art; with occasional comment. Credit given where possible.

Philosophy and Politics undergrad student at the University of Sheffield.

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