In this post I want to show you some portraits
that I have been taking over the past years.
Three of them I have edited colorful whereas
one of them is B/W as it fits better to
the environment.
Hope you like them!
In this Post we want to show you some awesome photographs
which are done with very long exposure.
Please help us to make our photographs become more famous
and become our Facebook Fan. If you have any questions or
jobs for us, do not hesitate to email us.
During the last weeks we have been thinking of giving other, talented photographers the opportunity to present their works on our blog. In this connection, we have been looking for them on our Twitter and Facebook pages. Today, we want to introduce Emma, an artist and photographer who is currently presenting her works in a gallery in Glasgow, Scottland.
Please visit her page and help her to share her photographs if you like them : http://www.emma-sywyj.com/
We are always interested in your photographs so if we really like them, we will publish them here. Just like our Facebook Page and message us.
Emma explains her photographs shown below in the following way:
"The first image of the village is part of series called La Dolce Fa Niente, which translate in Italian means the sweetness of doing nothing. It is part of two other series called the China series and Malaysia series, all three are interconnected. I have dual heritage and have family in all of these countries though closer family in Italy and Malaysia. When I go to these countries I feel foreign and like an insider at the same time, as my families are native. During my time in these countries I photograph my time there and document my trip. Through photographing the experience I go from inside/outsider to become something more. The image of the chair and the heater is from series named 'Interiors'. It was a project I conceived at University, I was moving around a lot and didn't real feel I had much of a real home. So I became interested in other peoples instead, I started photographing homes in and around South London predominantly as that's where I was studying. The homes in the series range from georgian family houses, to squats. In all the images there are no actual people present just the spaces they inhabit, and a trace of their existence, which is what I wanted to capture. The images themselvesare quite bleak and lonely. As far as professional photography goes outside of Fine Art photography, I do a lot of stills for films and a media company. "