By renowned Photography duo Winkler + Noah. Part of THE WITNESS: Fall of the Berlin Wall Anniversary 1989-2009 series.
Growing up on the wrong side of the wall might mean becoming blind. Everything that is behind it seems muffled and invisible. The reality is just a surrogate offered by the authorities, and it marks the passing by days till they become years. This is why we have chosen to portray symbolically 20 blind young people in their twenties, photographed in a tight close up of their faces, where the eyes are as if covered up by a white patina that makes impossible the vision of the world - W + N
Source: magnolius
ULTIMATE RAD.
Someone bet that retired cop Dennis Havel couldn’t shoot — and hit — a falling drop of water.
Havel won the $50 wager, and photographed that sucker too.
(Photo: Havel / Newsteam via the Telegraph)
Source: telegraph.co.uk
Above, a picture taken on January 28 by New Yorker writer Jon Lee Anderson in the ‘besieged mountain town of Rankous, with remaining civilians & fighters of the insurgent Free Syrian Army.’
- To follow Jon Lee Anderson’s Syria coverage: https://twitter.com/jonleeanderson
Source: twitter.com
Cross-stitched pieces of model Freja Beha Erichsen by Inge Jacobsen - Inge was commissioned to rework a series fashion photographs by Sebastian Faena For Georg Jensen‘s 2012 spring/summer jewelry ad campaign.
Source: magnolius
The shutter speed on this pinhole photo was 365 days!
On New Years Eve, Michael Chrisman picked up the camera he placed down one year ago, and the rest is history.
A Photo with a Shutter Speed of 365 Days
via Reddit
Source: photojojo
Robert Frank, Rodeo, New York City, from The Americans, 1955
From the Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History:
This photograph is one of the more benign, if jarring, images in Frank’s watershed book, The Americans, published in America in 1959 (the book was originally published in Paris in 1958) to an outcry of public controversy. Half of the country felt that Frank had betrayed his adopted home, and half felt his criticism was not only warranted but necessary. What is clear is that the photographs pierced the core of a country saturated with complacency and not entirely comfortable with its world persona. As it happened, the cowboy in the city was a good metaphor for America on the world stage in 1955: the country had emerged victorious from World War II, saving the world for democracy; at the same time, it had done so by unleashing the most terrifying weapon ever invented. Moreover, its egalitarian political ideals were severely undermined by a growing intolerance for racial and ideological differences, which intensified in the Cold War climate of the 1950s. The hypocrisy of such a position was perhaps most apparent to recent émigrés like Frank. While the specific antecedents of this image are a matter of interpretation, this ten-gallon-hatted, plaid-shirted, jeaned, booted, and silver-belt-buckled Tex leaning against a wire garbage can in the middle of New York are an undeniably odd sight—although his self-absorbed preening may not be. It highlights Frank’s talent for spotting camera-ready incidents that resonate far beyond the character’s immediate significance.
Source: metmuseum.org
This amusement park in China was abandoned before it was ever finished being built. Now, it’s now a favorite spot for adventurous photographers to photoshoot. Let’s go!! :D
There are more photos of this place? Another reason to vacation in the country of china.
Source: The Atlantic
Times Square, 1958 by Pete Turner
via fractionmagazine; nevver
Source: nevver
*Please forgive the lack of caption, we’re currently hypnotized by this photograph*
(Photo by BobMacMillan on Flickr)
Source: Flickr / bobmacmillan
A look at the British fashion photographer Miles Aldridge’s recent images.
Aldridge’s subjects for The New Yorker include Louboutin shoes, Zaha Hadid, and 3-D movies—and, this week, Jean Paul Gaultier, for Susan Orlean’s profile. A selection of Aldridge’s work for Vogue Italia will be on view at Casa Tua during Art Basel Miami Beach in early December.
Source: newyorker
Genius: Mounting a lens & bellows from an antique camera to a Canon 5D like Alex did. (Here’s an example pic)
Source: Flickr / alex12ga
This photo is of the discovered equipment of Bill Biggart, a photojournalist who lost his life on 9/11.
LIFE: They Were There - 9/11 Photographers
Photo by Chip East
Source: photojojo
Maybe you’ve drooled over the Fuji Finepix X100 like the rest of us (y’know, the digital camera that looks like a pretty pretty vintage camera).
Turns out Fuji’s really good at making us drool. Check out the Finepix X10. It’s a point-and-shoot that can shoot in RAW and snap 360 panoramas all while sporting a similar retro outside case.
via Gizmodo
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Source: photojojo







