Photographer Matt Logue shows with his Empty L.A. photo project what the City of Angels would look like if it was totally people-less.
The photos were taken over a period of 4 years (he began in 2005) at different places of LA.
Very interesting work. Check it out!
The artist Song Dong, one of the most inventive figures in contemporary Chinese art, has turned the contents of his mother's former home in Beijing, which was also his childhood home, into the installation titled "Waste Not.
These are all everyday life objects collected by Song Dong’s mother over the span of fifty years - clothes, books, kitchen utensils, toiletries, school supplies, shopping bags, rice bowls, dolls… That’s quite unusual. I like keeping stuff too, but not that and not like that…
“Waste Not” was exhibited at the New York Museum of Modern Art.
This is a cool project by Fred Lebain.
He just went to different areas of New York and took photos. He later printed those pictures in a large poster format. One year after his first visit, he went to the same spots and took a larger shot in which he set the poster he printed from his first visit.
The result is cool, I just wished there were more of these…
We often see photos of animals taken in the wild or in zoos but it’s not often that you can see them on white backgrounds!
A Belgian team named Life On White and led by Eric Isselée has taken “nearly 10,000 images of around 480 different animal species in an attempt to create the largest collection of animals photographed in front of a white background by a single photographer.”
You can purchase those pics online; parts of the benefits go to organisations that deal with the protection of animals.
Very creative work of Indonesian photographer Agan Harahap called ‘Super Hero’.
The scenes are taken from the mid 20-th centuries.
P.S. According to the author, Darth Vador is also a superhero, didn’t know that ;))
Very cool project "IN DA CAR" by Ashot Gevorkyan & Yaryshev Evgeny.
I’m sure car lovers should like it ;)
Jan Vormann started an unusual project in Berlin, he began to dispatch the holes left after the World War II with plastic construction pieces.
Then began the most interesting, a lot of elderly people and children joined him and began to do the same. Very touching, well done!
This is from World War II in the European Theater when the Germans invaded Russia and the great Battle of Stalingrad on August 21, 1942 took place with combined casualties estimated above 1.5 million.
Great work with minor details.
It took its author 6 years to finish the project.
Very interesting and unusual project from Mark Menjivar
And how does your fridge look inside? ;)