“When I started to create a name for myself and a style, I started to shoot where there was mood, emotion, hair & make up, and wardrobe. And people started to ask me for that type of look.” |
Who is Lyndsay Adler?
Lindsay Adler is an American portrait and fashion photographer based out of Manhattan, New York. Her editorials have appeared in Bullet Magazine, Zink Magazine and Fault. She has contributed to photo publications Professional Photographer, Rangefinder Magazine, and Popular Photography. she was born on the 17th September 1985. she likes to photography her women as strong and powerful unlike most photographers who photograph women as sexual and revealing. She is known for being a fashion photographer and she has risen to the of her industry she is a photographer and also an educator. |
“Envision your customer not as a group, but as a person. Who are they? What books do they read? Where do they shop? Who do they follow on Instagram? Who are their influencers? How do they make purchasing decisions? What emotions affect them when they would choose a photographer? Where do they live and how much do they make? When you fill this out it helps you figure out how to reach those people.”
– Lindsay Adler
“If you want someone to hire you because they love your work and you have a vision, you have to have a style. And if they want that, they can’t go elsewhere. It’s a way to making yourself wanted, and needed as a photographer.”
– Lindsay Adler
'I work with sewing, embroidery and drawing to explore the essence of signs in their physical manifestation. I take inspiration from my own personal experience and observation of how, in other cultures, bodies themselves are treated as living graphic symbols.' |
who is he ?
Maurizio Anzeri (Born 8 April 1969, in Loano, itlay) is an Italian contemporary artist living and working in London. He works in a variety of media including sculpture, photography, drawing and traditional craft techniques. what are his techniques? Maurizio Anzeri intricately embroiders directly onto found photographs with colored thread, in “an alchemic process of obscuring and revealing, erasing and enhancing.” The faces of serious-looking children, sophisticated adults, and prim newlyweds are obscured by intricate threadwork masks, while leaving exposed an eye, a mouth, or an ear. In his landscapes, diagrammatic rays emanate from both the natural and built environment, suggesting unseen and mysterious phenomena. Anzeri’s deft handiwork turns vintage portraits and landscapes into surreal, psychologically charged images, while upending the conventions of traditional photography. |
"I like money in its shredded state because it is stripped of value and power." |
who is she ?
Artist, art instructor and art coach Lisa Kokin lives and works in El Sobrante, California, outside of San Francisco. She attended the California College of the Arts in Oakland, CA and uses recycled and reclaimed materials to create mixed media textile art. what is her technique? Kokin then began deconstructing books and using the paper and covers as her medium. She uses a blender that was handed down from her family to shred and pulp the paper so that she can morph it into various shapes, sometimes preserving select words or pieces of text, or creating anagrams from letters of the text. |
"Although my work is dark and serious, there is a childish, playful naivety and innocence about it," |
who is she?
Born in 1989 into an artistic family in the Black Forest, Germany, Alma Haser is now based in London and on the southeast coast. She is known for her complex and meticulously constructed portraiture, which are influenced by her creativity and her background in fine art. Alma creates striking work that catches the eye and captivates the mind of its viewers. what is her technique? Expanding the dimensions of traditional portrait photography, Alma takes her photographs further by using inventive paper folding techniques, collage and mixed media to create layers of intrigue around her subjects she does this by manipulating her portraits into futuristic paper sculptures and blurring the distinctions between two-dimensional and three-dimensional imagery. |
who is she?
Magdalena Berny effectively creates emotion through the color tone of her photographs, which is what she has done in this photograph effectively. As this is a studio shoot, the lighting has been purposely focused on the front of her body. This enhances the color red in contrast with the dark background. The material of the red cloth looks a little like fog, fading away into the darkness, this adds to the eerie aspect of the photograph. As the girl has her hands on her face it shows that she is somehow distressed, this adds to the eerie atmosphere, as it seems almost different and not something that would usually happen, this makes the observer think and ask questions about the photograph. |
Who is he?
Bill Viola is an American contemporary video artist whose artistic expression depends upon electronic, sound, and image technology in new media. His works focus on the ideas behind fundamental human experiences such as birth, death and aspects of consciousness. "There's another world out there just beyond the world we're in. It's just on the other side of that translucent, semitransparent surface" |
Who is he ?
Marc Lamey is an award winning, photographer whose work focuses on portraiture and fashion. Marc's work has been featured in international publications and media. marc Lamey is a member of Creative Cloud. Marc focus mainly on portraiture photography, fashion and on implementing beauty into cityscape. |
"It's not a lack of confidence, because I can't argue with the fact that I've taken some good pictures. But it's just a raw fear that you've taken the last one." |
who is she?
Sally Mann, often mentioned when discussing the best photographer in the world, has stirred controversy with her intimate family portraits. Her work is often described as controversial – exploring the fragile age between childhood and adulthood and the thin line between them. One of her most iconic achievements is “Immediate Family”, her third collection, which was first exhibited in Chicago in 1990. The collection consists of 65 black-and-white photographs of Mann’s children who were at that time all under the age of ten. The images explore ordinary summer activities, such as swimming or playing board games. Yet, they also focus on much darker topics: sexuality, death, loneliness and injury. |