View allAll Photos Tagged LessIsMore.
Flickr Friday: Minimum
It has been awhile since I have done a minimalistic image. I love the simplicity of them and should do them more often.
Thanks for your visit. Take care and have a great weekend!
HFF!
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
The peeling black paint, dented grate and yellow lines simply created an aesthetic that attracted my attention while out shooting street in Glasgow. I know that it isn't 'my usual stuff' but I do photograph other thinigs too. Stay safe my Flickr friends!
I have been featured today in an Explore Takeover celebrating International Women's Month 2021 through the lens of women photographers. flickr.com/explore/2021/03/24
Looking Close on Friday...Jam
I'm trying to find my mojo and wondered if it was lurking in the bottom of a jam jar. Sadly not but I thought I'd have a go at this theme anyway. Some raspberry jam with a sprinkling of dried rose petals to add a little interest to a less is more shot. HLCoF
Lensbaby Trio 28 on Velvet setting, and macro filter.
Day 129/365:
I've been away for a few days so haven't managed to keep up with comments, I will have to start afresh as I have no chance of catching up. Got home very late tonight, exhausted and hadn't got a photo...scraped in at the last minute with a high key shot using my light panel. I have done similar before but I was desperate and made it slightly different. Off to bed now.
3/30: April 2020: A month in 30 pictures
A multiple exposure of my fuchsia that survived the winter and is so heavy with blooms that unfortunately two stems have already snapped off.
Macro Monday - Vibrant minimalism
I guess one would be more minimal but in this case (pardon the pun) it didn't look right so I'm hoping this will still count as it's a single vibrant colour (and in my opinion) still a simple image.
I should probably mention that these are silicone cupcake cases. HMM
Jose Dávila
Memory of a Telluric Movement
Jose Dávila is interested in space and mass, in mathematical laws and physical pheno-mena. Thus, his oeuvre characteristically plays with gravity and apparent weightlessness, with statics and dynamics, forces of tension and compression, and those precarious moments before something collapses. In addition, he incorporates natural and industrially manufactured materials; from this juxtaposition, he creates poetic works that are sensorially captivating and structurally articulated.
Memory of a Telluric Movement is the title of this exhibition at Museum Haus Konstruktiv. Jose Dávila’s thoughtful calibration of mass and lightness, volume and transparency, geometric and organic forms, natural and industrial materials characterizes his distinctive objects, installations and paintings. At the same time, the exhibition at Haus Konstruktiv constitutes a reminder that any (telluric) movement, no matter how slight, can cause a static well-balanced structure to collapse. In this sense, the solo show also refers to the current global situation, which can quickly be thrown off track by sociopolitical, ecological or economic developments.