Archived entries/  Photography

This is Photographic Architecture.

Filip Dujardin is a Belgian photographer who engages in a unique kind of architecture, a photographic architecture built on remixing, juxtaposing, and synthesizing.

Kelly Chan on Architizer notes Dujardin’s images have been “likened to old factories along the American rust belt as well as new projects by OMA and work by Steven Holl.”
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This is Berlin in Stunning Photography.

In a stunning, on-going series of photographs, self-taught photographer Matthis Heiderich shows you his own unique vision of Berlin.

Heiderich told Co Design, “My photography is about the fine line between utopia and dystopia. It’s very important to me to conserve a special atmosphere [so] [y]ou have to look at them as series, that’s how they function.”
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This is a Manufactured Totem.

Here at Super Nrmal, we love bicycles, alternative forms of transport, and when people show us a way the world can be that we never expected.

French photographer Alain Delorme does just that in his Totems series, a look at contemporary urban China.
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This is a Film Shot on an iPhone 4.

Aaron Rose—artist, film director, exhibition curator and writer—created a series of three original short films and photo essays for Incase. Kreuzberg is a beautiful short film shot on location in Berlin using only an iPhone 4.

From Incase:

Since the 1980s, the historically Turkish neighborhood of Kreuzberg has also been home to a population of artists, musicians and anarchists. According to Rose, the film is a tribute to Brian Eno and David Bowie, both of whom recorded in Kreuzberg in the 1970s.

The film is accompanied by a stirring photo essay.
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This is Tilt-Shift Time-Lapse.

Sydney-based photographer and filmmaker Keith Loutit is known as the “pioneer of the tilt-shift / time-lapse technique” for filmmaking.


Bathtub IV, one film from the ‘Bathtub’ series that “transformed both iconic and familiar Sydney scenes into miniature wonderlands.”
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