18.3.11

COOL POSTERS

I have found these really cool posters in OK Great, a website by "a tight-knit crew of designers, writers + artists, hell-bent on delivering the best in art, design and culture" as they define themselves. They cover a wide range of subjects such as music, photography, installation, fashion and many more. The design is clean and the navigation easy. 

Ole! 






















 

9.3.11

DAVID GILLANDERS, PHOTOJOURNALISM FOR THE BRAVE ONES

Absolutely by chance, I got my hands in a magazine page featuring part of an article about photojournalist  David Grillanders. I didn't know nothing about him but his images of street kids of Ukraine have clung like a leech in my retina and in my mind, I felt compelled to immediately find his work. A collection of image portraying hard realities. Images that reminds you how privileged you are while disturbs the ideas that you had about other places. Lives that you can even get to comprehend.

This images are not for sensitive audience but they are as dramatic as beautiful.

Ole! 



7.3.11

LONDON STREET PHOTOGRAPHY AT THE LONDON MUSEUM

The other day I went to an exhibition at the London Museum that features over 200 images taken in the streets of London since 1860 to the present day. It's an amazing collection of every day life moments in this amazing city. Some of the images are interesting from an historical point of view but most of them are art works in their own right. I found really interesting to have the opportunity to see how people has lived in the past, to become aware of how things have changed (or how they have not changed at all) and to see through the eyes of artist that find their inspiration in normal people and ordinary places.

As well as the pictures you can watch a documentary about how street photography has evolved in the last 100 years, how the people attitude has changed when they being photographed by an stranger and the role of this kind of photography in society.

The exhibition is on until the 4th of September, so there is plenty of time, and it's free, which always is appealing. Don't miss out. I just hope you are luckier than me and that you will find less people visiting at the same time as you, because it was a bit tedious to walk in a slow queue with people trying to admire every single shoot for what seemed an eternity.

Special mention to Mr. Wolf Suschitzky and his incredible photography of London more than 50 years ago, incredible compositions and really engaging pictures.

Ole!