This gallery contains the second installment of my ongoing architectural photo series called Urban Concentration.
This gallery contains the second installment of my ongoing architectural photo series called Urban Concentration.
Urban Concentration is a new photographic long term project that captures how population density manifests in densely packed architecture.
This is a gallery of 11 photographs taken at the Guggenheim Museum in New York.
Eight monochrome photographs of the Statue of Liberty, taken in October 2024, before Uncle Donald was elected, but was already looming on the horizon. At least Lady Liberty seemed undaunted.
This post is the first installment of a new series of posts all about photographs taken in New York City in October 2024. The first set of posts is a sub-series called New York Refractions.
On my recent trip to Brussels, I created a series of complex architectural photographs in the vein of my past Deliberately Confusing series. Read more about it and view the images.
After a long hiatus I returned to what once was one of my favourite photo locations, the former steel mill that now is the Landschaftspark Duisburg Nord. To keep things fresh, I decided to go there at a time of day I have never been there before: The early morning hours of dawn.
Returning home from an errand in the already dark evening, I noticed a red light in the corner of my eye. It was an illuminated shaft tower. I just had to photograph it.
The village of Hörnum on the island of Sylt, Germany, is a charming destination with the notable St. Thomas Church. Despite limited angles, the author captured the church’s beauty through various photos and expresses excitement for future visits.
This post is a short story about how photographing interior architecture helped me discover that mathematics can (quite unexpectedly) lead to beauty and grace.