View allAll Photos Tagged geometricabstract
Just having a little fun colorizing the architectural detail on the Crate & Barrel store in Beverly Hills.
Here's a street view from Google Maps showing how I originally saw the building.
Inspired by a few of my favorite photographers, Joel Tjintjelaar and Meriol Lehmann, both of whom have incredible streams you should check out. My camera is nowhere near capable of doing what they do.
Paneling on a tour bus snapped on the I-5 freeway in the Grapevine pass, just north of Los Angeles.
There's a bit of a blur on this, even though I shot it at 1/2000th of a second. I think it's because it's such a tight crop of a much larger image. (I wasn't driving, by the way.)
Another vew of the fantastical stairwell at the Cahill Center at Caltech
The possibilities are endless with this space!
The architect of this building, Thom Mayne, won the Pritzker Architecture Prize in 2005.
Untitled Composition (#13) 2012
Acrylic and Oil on Canvas
30 " x 40" x 2.5"
Signed and dated on Verso
A photo of this piece in the making at the studio is here: www.flickr.com/photos/31207458@N07/7100031761/in/photostream
As always, I'm at www.brycehudson.com Stop By, Say Hi ;-) I love to connect with other modernists, designers and artists!
This is a false-color and rotated view of one of the slatted canopies and balconies at the Getty Museum. It made for an electric geometric abstract.
This is a tightly cropped and tilted view of a piece of graphic art in the atrium of the AON Building in downtown L.A. It is very glossy and brilliantly colored, as you can see, but difficult to photograph in the tight space just inside the south entrance. I should bring my ultra-wide lens with me and see what I can capture.
Closeup of a modern light fixture at the Radisson SAS 1919 Hotel in Reykjavik, taken during my trip to Iceland in July.
This is a false-color image of a steel door in Pasadena. I'd previously posted another view of this door. Something about the great lines and textures called for a little color.
something about the blurry & overexposed photo of a 'tree cancer' below made me decide to work with it. After much experimentation, my favorite version was this b&w geometric abstract............thanks to Ribbet!!
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