Archive for the ‘Photography’ Category

Joe Nishizawa

Added April 2nd, 2008

Joe Nishizawa

On first inspection, the work of Joe Nishizawa looks a lot like a combination of computer graphics and Hollywood scale set design. Instead, every image is an entirely untreated photograph of a real location he has visited and captured as he found it, often without the use of even a flashlight.

His work centers around some of Japans most impressive industrial design, much of which is found hidden deep underground in various facilities that seldom grant any kind of public access. Taking pride in documenting just how technologically advanced a nation Japan has become, he’s created a collection of books that consistently render sublime imagery from objects and environments created primarily for function rather than any aethetic value.

If recent rumors about a live action Akira are true, I hope that whoever’s heading up the production design dept. has some of Joe’s books on their shelf.

Joe Nishizawa website

Old Pingmag interview (2006)

Alex MacLean: Aerial Photography

Added January 7th, 2008

Hay Stacks

‘Hay Stacks’

Flower Fields

‘Flower Fields’

Circular Housing Development

‘Circular Housing Development’

Algae Between Logs

‘Algae Between Logs’

Check the rest of his impressively consistent portfolio at www.alexmaclean.com

Masataka Nakano: Tokyo Nobody

Added December 17th, 2007

Tokyo Nobody

Staying on the Japan tip from last Friday, here’s another nice photo set to peep at.

For 11 years, photographer Masataka Nakano has kept watch for the most impossible of scenes: central Tokyo street scenes inhabited by nobody. These aren’t manipulated composites but rather the result of a dedicated opportunist. There’s something very eerie about these desolate moments and their startling absence of congestion, usually so integral to the portrayal of this environment.

This is just a sample selection but you can pick up the complete series in this 96 page book published back in Sept 2007. If you’re into this check out more of Masataka’s work at his online gallery.

Hats off to Matt from Samurai.fm for pointing this stuff out to me.

La Chute

Added December 12th, 2007

La Chute

“When the social elevator is broken you have to know how to bounce. Between the take off and the fall, the man parachuted in the city learns to control his trajectory.”

Wicked little photo set from French photographer Denis Darzacq.

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