Dronescapes 是与*的无人机摄影网站 Dronestegram 和著名摄影编辑Ayperi Karabuda Ecer合作创建的,它是*一本汇集了全球*无人机航拍照片的书。它给了我们从全新的有利位置俯瞰地球的激动人心的机会,无论是从里约热内卢鸟瞰救世主基督,还是从飞行中的老鹰几英寸处拍摄的照片,还是从墨西哥塔穆尔瀑布上空拍摄的令人眩晕的照片,讨论了无人机摄影的到来如何标志着航空摄影历史↑的一个重大转变。Created in collaboration with Dronestegram, the world-leading drone photography website, and Ayperi Karabuda Ecer, a highly renowned photography editor, Dronescapes is the first book to bring together the very best photographs taken by quadcopters around the globe. It grants us the thrilling opportunity to see our planet from entirely new vantage points, whether this is a bird's-eye view of Christ the Redeemer in Rio de Janeiro, a photograph taken inches away from an eagle in mid-flight, or
Cards: 28 pages Publisher: MACK BOOKS (May 1 2016) Language: English ISBN-10: 1910164615 ISBN-13: 978-1910164617 Product Dimensions: 12.2 x 0.1 x 15 cm Shipping Weight: 240 g 此书为明信片版 美国纪实摄影师 Alec Soth (b. 1969) 出生于明尼苏达州明尼阿波利斯(Minneapolis, Minnesota)并现居于此,擅长纪录美国中西部的在地人文景观。他出版了超过25本书籍、举办过50场以上的个展,广受各大媒体评论家报导并囊括各种摄影奖项。2015年,更被英国电讯报(The Telegraph)赞誉为「美国社会和地理景观*伟大的摄影师」。 Alec Soth 善于执行具有叙事性的摄影计划,游走各地纪录真实故事,作品常以平凡的社会光景为主题,透过人物的链接,衍伸出各种具有缅怀、忧愁甚至带有敏感的情绪。2004年,Steidl出版了他的首本摄影集《Sleeping by the Mississippi》,纪录他沿着密西西比河畔的*一次公路旅行,甫上市
You know what London looks like - or so you think. You've seen the bright lights of Piccadilly Circus, the dull grey skies above. You've seen Buckingham Palace and Big Ben, black cabs and red phone boxes. But the tourist vision isn't the whole story. Tucked away down the Big Smoke's twisting alleyways are worlds that visitors rarely get to see. This illuminating new book brings together 30 contemporary photography projects that reveal beautiful, surprising hidden sides of the capital. Each one takes the reader on a visual journey that you won't find in the guidebooks. Meander through the magical half-light of Hampstead Heath at dusk and trace the battle scars left on the city's buildings by the Blitz. Meet the boat-dwelling modern hippies who've made the canals their home, the suburban kids on the few remaining adventure playgrounds, the commuters who stroll to their desk jobs like figures in a Lowry painting. Watch from the top floor of a double decker bus as theatrical street scenes unfold, travel deep un
New York City is defined by water, yet many of its shorelines are largely unknown. Photographer Susannah Ray spent more than two years exploring these shores and waterways that New Yorkers utilitise year-round to fish, swim, sit and daydream. The resulting images, inspired by Walt Whitman's poetry, take us on a seasonal journey past sheltered bays, under great bridges and over deep rivers to give us a new perspective on a mega-city we thought we knew so well.
Few relationships in life are as deep, intense and complicated as those of sisters. Photographer Sophie Harris-Taylor has spent the past two years photographing and interviewing more than 100 sets of sisters in an effort to understand and capture all that sisterhood means. Accompanied by quotes and texts revealing each set of sisters' individual stories, the viewer is offered a rare glimpse into the histories, complexities and stories behind each unique relationship. Themes of trust, jealousy, memory, loss, petulance and unconditional love are explored both through the texts and the imagery.
Previously unpublished colour photographs of London's East End showing a time before great change. When a local photographer was invited to examine 1,000s of David Granick's colour slides in early 2017, he knew he'd seen something special. These images capture the post-war streets of Stepney, Whitechapel, Spitalfields and beyond in the warm hues of Kodachrome film at a time when black and white photography was the norm. Acquired by Tower Hamlets Local History Library Archives in the early 1980s and preserved there safely since, these photographs show an East London on the cusp of social change.
Powerful portraits of identical twins reveal unnerving similarities, subtle differences and unbreakable bonds. Award-winning photographer Peter Zelewski has spent the last four years capturing the faces and stories of identical twins. Some inexplicably lost their hearing at the exact same time, others unlock each others' phones with their indistinguishable fingerprints, but perhaps more surprisingly, some don't get on. Appearing alongside personal quotes, these powerful portraits tap in to one of the most fascinating of all human relationships.
The River Lea runs from Hertfordshire down to the Thames in East London. Once a busy commercial waterway, it is now a nature reserve and leisure area. From the grand site of the 2012 Olympic Games it passes industrial estates, sports centres, new build homes and council estates. Escape from the the reinvention of social the attraction of the meeting of different the persistence of nature. Exploring together, Polly Braden David Campany have photographed here for over a decade, moving between straight documentary and experimental staging. There are poetic snapshots and bizarre incidents, naturalistic portraits and fictional enactments. It's a record of the strange nature of the place and reflection upon the nature of photography. Adventures in the Valley weaves together its motifs, building a complex de*ion of the past, present and future of this half-forgotten thread of land.
Intense, other-worldly, after-hours images taken in one of Europe's most iconic cities - Christian Reister's black-and-white photographs capture the surreal, threatening and ethereal character of Berlin at night. As an insider the German photographer scans the city for unstaged, unexpected moments and seeks out the strange night-time energy of a place and its people. See Berlin as it comes alive after dark and get lost in the underground scene of a city known for its alternative nightlife.
Anarchists and fascists, yuppies and Rambos, eels and mash. Dalston in the 80s was a world apart from the New York fashion scene - but when photographer Andrew Holligan made the unexpected move there, he found a humanity on the streets that changed him and his art forever. Dalston in the 80s is a deeply personal documentation of the people and the places at the heart of East London before its rapid gentrification.
Portraits of East London creatives in their spaces. Accompanied by quotes about the creative process.Jenny Lewis spent three years in and out of studios across Hackney photographing a diverse range of artists inside their creative spaces. The project began with a portrait of fashion designer Isobel Webster and has grown organically into a 'family tree' of creatives each person nominating someone else for the book. The result is a compelling picture of a creative community in the heart of East London at a time of great change as well as an unusual insight into the creative mind. Illustrators, filmmakers, jewellers, ceramicists and fashion designers not only invite us into their studio but also share their private thoughts about the creative process. Lewis notes that many of those that she photographed have since been forced to leave their studios due to rent increases which are threatening so many artists in the borough. This book will stand as a reminder and celebration of the spirit of creativity in one o