Sunday, February 13, 2011

Photography by Ana Kras


Ana Kras was born in belgrade, serbia, in july of 1984. Ana works on different personal and commissioned projects. She started working on various self-initiated and commissioned projects, from furniture design to illustration and photography.













Photography by Bobby Doherty


Beautiful photography by Bobby Doherty, professional photographer, who only 21 years old from Brooklyn, NY.











Photography by Michael Wolf


Michael Wolf was born in Munich in 1954. He grew up in the United States, Europe and Canada, and studied at UC Berkeley and at the Folkwang School in Essen, Germany. He moved to Hong Kong in 1995 for a period of intensive study of Chinese cultural identity and the complexities of Chinese urban architecture.




Michael Wolf has published five photobooks on China: China im Wandel (Frederking und Thaler, 2001,) Sitting in China (Steidl, 2002,) Chinese Propaganda Posters (Taschen, 2003,) Hong Kong Front Door Back Door (2005,) and Hong Kong Inside Outside (Peperoni Press/Asia One Publishing, 2009.) Wolf's work has been exhibited extensively in galleries and at art fairs throughout the world since 2005, including shows at the Museum of Contemporary Photography in Chicago in 2006, at the Museum Centre Vapriikki in Tampere, Finland, in 2007 and most recently at the Aperture Gallery in New York in January 2010.









Photography by Samuel Bradley


Samuel Bradley study photography at UCA Farnham in Surrey. Samuel currently based in Farnham, United Kingdom.











Automotive Photography by David Ryle


David Ryle, born in 1978, is a photographer living and working from London. His work has been used for both editorial and advertising campaigns as well being as exhibited in various galleries. This year his images have been selected for both the AoP Awards and The Creative Review Photography Annual. Within his work he explores the notion of space and the human relationship with our surroundings, often he is drawn to the idea of nothingness, shooting the redundant space between two territories.