‘Mollison’s photo projects are defined by smart, original concepts applied to serious social and environmental themes. For Playground, Mollison photographed children at play in their school playgrounds, inspired by memories of his own childhood and interested in how we all learn to negotiate relationships and our place in the world through play. Various scenes of laughter, tears, and games demonstrate the intense experiences which happen in the playground. For each picture, Mollison sets up his camera during school break time, making multiple frames and then composing each final photograph from several scenes, in which he finds revealing “play” narratives. With photographs from rich and poor schools, numerous middle schools, and some high schools, in countries including Argentina, Bhutan, Bolivia, India, Israel, Italy, Japan, Kenya, Nepal, Norway, Sierra Leone, the United Kingdom, and the U.S., Mollison also provides access for readers of all ages to issues of global diversity and inequality. The photographs will be available through Aperture Foundation. Sales proceeds support the Foundation’s public and book-publishing program.’
Stop Motion Test from last year
This was a dry run for the stop motion done for elosilo.com. Its got no music and was pulled together in about 15 minutes as a test to see what would work for the real deal.
Real good things come in small packages
Peter van Agtmael print from Magnum. Yaaaahhhtzeee!
petervanagtmael.net
James Mollison: Libyan battle Trucks
For more of this epic series: http://jamesmollison.com/photography/libya-trucks/
Walter Iraheta – Kyptonita
Kriptonita is one of the most paradigmatic works by Salvadoran artist Waterio Iraheta. It implies a single word that transports us irremediably to that rarity which produced in Superman, the man of steel, effects contrary to those qualities that made him an indestructible superhero. However, Iraheta’s work is based on the antithesis of the perfect hero archetype – a corpulent figure with Anglo-Saxon features and an impeccable appearance. First of all, his story begins with the representation of a super-boy with clearly local features, a boy who from up on high, amidst the clouds, is posed in the classic position, his hands on his waist to better show the “S” that covers his chest. This new version of the man of steel provokes a series of readings that put the myth in question and then, by substitution, propose a reconsideration of the limits of heroism. Who are the real heroes? Without a doubt, they are those who lack supernatural powers and yet still resolve the problems of existence in the planetary realm where madness and extreme deficiencies dwell.
– Rosina Casali
http://unitedphotoindustries.com/exhibitions/superheroes/walter-iraheta-kryptonita/
Tom Lowe
This is incredible.
Beef and Oil …Vice Mag
Aerial photography is always impressive. From a older issue of Vice. Beef Factory. Mishka Henner