An exercise in negative space and careful composition.
Anyone who’s followed my photography for any length of time will have detected that I am often drawn to graphic shapes and lines and perhaps fairly formal compositions. Today I go back into my archives to rediscover a series of images I captured whilst visiting the Falkland Islands a few years back. Aging paintwork, textures, a sense of neglect….
Following on from yesterday’s post, another shot from the Falkland Islands. Perhaps this has the makings of an ongoing theme …. “bones on textured backgrounds” 🙂 This time a skull (I should think from a sheep) on a rusting sheet of iron.
For something rather different. The red chair….. Photographed at the Munch Museum, Oslo, Norway. Highly reflective glass and steel surfaces and deliberately blow the highlights allowing the red chair to be the key element.
Thorvaldsen Museum, Copenhagen. 2023. I invite you to look closely at this one, there’s a fair bit happening (despite the main subject being chizelled out of stone)
Brandenburg Gates, Berlin. 2023. There are few things I appreciate more than a nice puddle. (you may quote me) 🙂 KD
The black-legged kittiwake (Rissa tridactyla) is a frequent sight in Arctic and Sub-Arctic regions. A member of the gull family, this individual was photographed from the deck of a small ship in the Svalbard Archipelago. These birds would often follow behind the ship waiting for small marine life to be stirred up in the ship’s wake. I decided to process this image as a black and white with a subtle sepia toning. I particularly like the arc of water […]
Snow Bunting leaving nest, Svalbard. The snow bunting leaving its nest tucked away in a rock crevice. Some people maintain that birds should never be photographed at a nest. This is well meaning as some species are sensitive to any approach and may abandon a nest. This species was understood to be tolerant and this bird was unconcerned by our approach and presence as it went about its activities. The bird was fast moving and unpredictable. […]
Svalbard, 2023. Moody skies can really make a photograph. Other than the black and white conversion, this image is almost straight out of camera. ~KD