Adam Ekberg
Posted: February 5th, 2010 | No Comments »I discovered Adam Ekberg via Daily Serving this morning. Absolutely amazing work.
I discovered Adam Ekberg via Daily Serving this morning. Absolutely amazing work.
It’s been a while since I’ve done a work of others post, so I thought I’d share City of Ambition by Ferit Kuyas (via EV+/-). These images seem to show an intersection of influence from Ed Burtynsky and Stephen Shore, which I love.



Kuyas’ other work is well worth browsing too, particularly aggloswiss and Archetypes.

Ian Van Coller, one of my esteemed undergraduate professors, was interviewed for Photolucida’s blog. A good read, worth taking a look at.
This has got to be one of the coolest things I’ve seen in a while. You can visit the site here.
MUTO a wall-painted animation by BLU from blu on Vimeo.
Found this via Chase Jarvis (@chasejarvis on Twitter)
Some great portraits on NY Times, via Chris Toalson’s blog (image also swiped from his blog because I’m feeling lazy).
This image caught my attention, and I just had to pass it along. Phenomenal.
I discovered the work of Harm van den Dorpel today via i heart photograph. I wasn’t terribly impressed with a lot of it, and most of it seems more like the start to a project rather than a finished product, but there are some very interesting ideas presented in the work. Here are a few examples that I found particularly fascinating:
Forest / Lines (start clicking, you’ll figure it out)

© Allison Wermager & Alexander M Harrington

© Allison Wermager & Alexander M Harrington
I stumbled across this body of work by Allison Wermager and Alexander M Harrington, titled Artificial Sunset, via i heart photograph. At first I was very resistant to them but I was somehow drawn to continue looking at them. The juxtapositions of the black and white photographs and bright colors do some strange things to my eyes, and I’m not sure how I feel about that. But I am really enjoying the experience of looking at the images (see them a bit larger on the website). I think it would be interesting to see some wall-sized prints of these.
I was disappointed to find out that there is no statement of any sort on their website, so I’m a bit in the dark as to the reason and method for this imagery.