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Showing 431 - 440 of ~4143 |
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| 04/10/2015 11:44:13 AM | the summer palace by TiberiusComment: I love this photograph because it's unresolved; there are many possible interpretations of it, and the answer can come only from each viewer, rather than something imposed by the photographer. For me it's like the first paragraph or two of a good suspense novel ... where you are taken immediately on to unfamiliar ground; where your preconceptions and prejudices as a reader (or in this case viewer) are challenged. Where the bounds of your personal comfort zone are immediately tested. You feel the sand shifting a little under your feet, and scramble for a grip on what's happening, what's already happened, what's about to happen.
There's no good reason why a photograph should not make the viewer feel slightly uncomfortable, and the most ambitious and lastingly interesting photographs do so.
I like this because it's not like a million other photographs. Why get yourself a camera and then make only pictures that are familiar, comfortable, and terminally boring? Pictures that can be absorbed and understood in a second or two? Pictures of which the only thing a viewer can think to say is "Nice", or "Soooo beautiful". Why not instead do as you have here and make something of substance? Something original, and durable?
On the technical side, your photographic craft is excellent; good exposure, nice tones, blah, blah, blah. But you can buy a camera and lens that does all that stuff quite automatically and consistently. You can't buy a camera that has an auto-interest setting, nor a significance-bracketing dial. That part is all you, and can't be bought at all.
Superb photograph, incisively seen and well executed. A yellow thumb is yours. Slip it under the short leg of a wonky table and you'll thank me one day. As I thank you now for this terrific photograph.
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| 04/10/2015 10:04:32 AM | goddamn the man by DiukComment: I really love this minimalist style of photography (actually, also of art generally, of cuisine, of music and just about everything). There's something in it that reveals essentials by excluding what doesn't matter so much. Here we have extravagant contrast, and suspension of all photographic subtlety. And it works beautifully for me. I'm also very keen on harsh crops, and on juxtapositions of person with urban spoor (spoor = tracks, artifacts, so I refer to the signs).
Here's a small thing that's actually big ... if it were not for the reflected light on the spectacles, the picture would be diminished. That light elevates, because it confers character somehow, at least in my fevered mind.
As a photograph it's more like a cartoon or caricature than a fully realised image. But I mean the good kind of cartoon, like a scintillating political cartoon in a newspaper. Something that distills a complex idea down to its essence, with amazing (yet generally unnoticed) economy of rendering.
I would not want every photograph to look like this, but I would be disinterested in photography if at least some didn't. We're all better photographers for seeing and appreciating elegant economy of expression of this standard.
It's also graphically, compositionally, very interesting. Negative space isn't merely blank or unused space; it has a purpose. It's part of what the picture is, not what it isn't.
I fling a pulsating yellow thumb at your feet, and hope that it may light your way through this darkness. Thank you.
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| 04/10/2015 08:35:06 AM | A Sense of Directionby Yo_SpiffComment: I am a committed fan of pareidolia. But that's not enough to get a picture across my finishing line and onto the podium. It's got to be more than just a happy coincidence; something with a further dimension. And this one is. How lucky you were to find the looming face being oriented by the spray painted directions? Unless you spray painted them yourself, in which case it's instead how naughty, but clever? But I proceed on the assumption that it's all objet trouvé.
I suppose some would think pictures like this a bit trivial; just a gimmick and not 'serious' photography. I mean, you just walked along, saw it, stood in the obvious place, and took a shot. Surely anyone can do that? But photography is exactly that; being there, recognising what you see, and then using a camera. Most camera owners start with the third of those, and then try to incidentally add the other two. But that's ass-backwards. And the result is far too many very skilled photographs of nothing.
So I like this because it's about why we take photographs; to assay our imagination, and to stick out our tongues at the world.
I smash a yellow thumb across your bows, and I thank you and all who sail with you.
 | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 04/10/2015 05:30:40 AM | Macy's Paradeby markwileyComment: Excellent street photograph, made better for me by your insurrectionist crop of the guy with the phone. And there's the smoking girl contrasting with the bride. And it's black & white. And (one more) I like how the centre is nearly blown out, creating a great swoosh of energy almost blowing the picture apart. This'll get a crap score, but not from me. I think it's terrific, and interesting, and thought-provoking. It also illustrates the fundamental difference between a photographer and a photography enthusiast quite nicely. You're a photographer. Thank you. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 04/10/2015 05:22:58 AM | No titleby SistoComment: Not my cup of tea and yet, and yet ... it's wonderful, and just goes to show that I know nothing. Or what I think I know is nothing, and what I don't know is something! Confused?
It's a lovely, deeply satisfying photograph. Absolutely perfect composition, so elegantly judged that it's quite unimpeachable on that score. The colours are glorious. And the contrast (I mean the figurative contrast, not the photographic one) between the delicate spray of the leaves and the bluntness of the streaked wall is ... no other or lesser word will do ... beautiful. I also like very much the suggestion of a distant skyline beyond the wall: it looks like a ruined or ravaged place over there, at least in my imagination, and that gives context to the foreground wall. Interesting (and humbling) photograph that I admire very much. Thank you. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 04/10/2015 04:56:33 AM | ubique in tenebras cordisby Bear_MusicComment: Well of course I love it because it's dark, it's weird to the point of madness, and it's got gorgeous Gothic tones. It's impossible to resolve comfortably; in fact discomfort is its middle name. And the older I get the more I look like Brando's Kurtz. And finally I really love sly titular allusions, as you obviously must have noticed, so it's a pretty good fit all round. Thank you. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 04/10/2015 02:15:04 AM | you first by LevTComment: Just bloody fabulous! Such an interesting, amusing, real life photograph. I love shadows, and I love juxtapositions, and this is a classic in that quirky genre. How can we not imagine that upper shadow to be a huge mechanical dinosaur? Or perhaps an alien, sizing up a potential abduction. And the postbox (is it a postbox?) is animated into life as well. It stands tight lipped, hoping to be invisible, waiting for the strike from above. The human victim is blissfully unaware, and sees nothing. Happily, you did see. It's terrific. Thank you. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 04/09/2015 12:07:22 PM | Sand and lightby hajekaComment: I usually flick past landscapes, but not this one. The sensual mood that you have created/captured is remarkably beautiful. Most landscapes are static; they just lie there looking spectacular like a supermodel on a pool lounger. But yours is dynamic, and that makes all the difference for me; in yours the supermodel is scratching her ... let's say her ear. That is, there's something interesting going on. The sense of movement, the dance between sand, air and light, is gorgeous. I think this photograph will go very close to the blue ribbon, and if it does I would not quibble one bit. It may not be my preferred cup of tea as a genre, but it's undeniably lovely, stimulating and interesting. Thank you. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 04/09/2015 11:53:41 AM | Bugs, Dogs And The Toyotaby grahamgatorComment: I cannot resist this kind of photograph. I use my own side mirrors as a set every time I go out photographing wildlife (where I go you are most unwise to get out of your vehicle). I love the surreal effect of something in the side mirror; everything looks like Dali was involved. This one is a great example of the whacky world of side mirror shots. I've yet to figure out how to get an elephant to lie down on the road after I pass by, as has your dog. But I'll keep trying after this. I enjoyed it very much and I thank you. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 04/09/2015 11:46:33 AM | Ruby don't take your love to town.by pointandshootComment: Awwww, you've been peeking at something of mine, and you have thoroughly thrashed me at my own game. That's nearly an elephant ... Is it? It feels like an elephant, although the uncertainty about that question is marvellous to me. It is, it isn't, it is, it must be; the real answer doesn't matter. This is a beautiful, mystical photograph, perfectly poised on the knife edge between the spiritual and the corporeal. Had I produced this photograph, I'd have been thrilled and alas, surprised, and very happy. That a fellow photographer created it in this challenge makes me happier still. It's a beautiful thing. Thank you. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
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Showing 431 - 440 of ~4143 |
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