portraits

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Riding atop a paddle board, artist Sean Yoro (aka Hula), paints murals while floating on the waves, placing his works just above sea level. The murals, all portraits of women, have a hyperrealistic quality that appear as if each is existing just above the tide. Due to the works’ position above the water they reflect perfectly into the waves, the image extending out far from the painted surface.

The NYC-based artist paddles out to paint the murals, balancing his acrylic paint on his board all the while. Hula grew up on the island of Oahu, where he spent most of his days in the ocean. Although he grew up dabbling in graffiti, watercolor, and tattoo art, he didn’t take his work seriously until he began to paint the the human body when he was 21. Hula also uses cracked surfboards as a surface to paint his female portraits, more of which you can see on his Instagram, @the_hula. (via Street Art News)

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The Rise of Hip Hop Photography

Native from Bronx where she grew up in the 80′s and 90′s, Lisa Leone has been surrounded by the hip-hop rise community. With her passion for photography, the woman began to capture portraits of men and women who today are hip-hop iconic musicians. This touching series is actually the subject of an exhibition The Bronx Museum of the Arts till 11st of January. To discover.

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A comedian’s weapon in the battle for laughter is motion. Whether it’s firing synapses creating new ideas, or wild hand gestures attempting to convey them, professional funny people have little use for stillness. Perhaps that’s why it’s so difficult to capture their essence in portraiture.

One photographer, however, has made it his mission to bare the souls of comedians in pictures—often hilariously—and he’s devoted the last seven and a half years of his life to doing so.

Funny Business

When Seth Olenick was photo editor of Heeb Magazine, he would always assign himself the task of shooting any comedians the publication profiled. His love of comedy stems from an early appreciation of The Ben Stiller Show, a program those in the know will assure you turned out to be Ground Zero for the most influential names in comedy over the past 20 years. When Olenick decided to start a long-term photo project, he naturally gravitated toward comedians, which is how his new book came to take shape. Funny Businessfeatures 200 portraits of the rising stars and supernovas of the comedy universe, and it presents them in ways that are both funny and revealing. It was a chance for Olenick to not only meet some of his heroes, like Weird Al Yankovic and Judd Apatow, but to work with them as well.

“The intention behind the project was that it would be a collaboration,” he says. “Some of these people, I’d have an idea ahead of time of what we might do, and others, I’d go to their homes, look around for ten minutes and come up with the idea. And I would say ‘Why don’t we do this?’ and they’d say, ‘Okay, but why don’t we do it this way?’ and I’d say ‘Okay.’ And that’s kind of how most of it went.”

In order to get his subjects comfortable, one of the first things Olenick would tell them was that if they ever absolutely hated an idea he pitched, to let him know. This policy led to an atmosphere of improvisation, with the subject and photographer bouncing ideas off each other. Once they arrived at an idea, there was a lot of trial and error, and through shooting more and more, they’d arrive at the actual shot.

“When I’m laughing and the other person’s laughing, you know you’ve hit on something,” Olenick says. “That’s the point when I just say, ‘Let’s not keep pushing. We got it.’ If you keep pushing, it becomes something it’s not.”

Of course, getting to the point of actual laughter, either for the participants or the eventual audience, is not something that always happens when photographing comedians. Deprived of their words or any sense of motion, comics tend not to fall back on just making funny faces and hoping for the best. Instead, it’s the photographer’s responsibility to coax the humor out in a natural way.

“I try not to force the comedy. A lot of times it just happens organically,” Olenick says. “A lot of people who’ve tried photographing comedians say to me, ‘That must have been really hard, I tried to get them to be funny the whole time and it just didn’t work.’ And I say, ‘That’s the problem. You’re not supposed to try to get them to be funny. You’re supposed to just set them up in a situation where funny can happen.’

Have a look through more of the images, and read about the stories behind them, in the slides above.

(excerpt taken from Fast Company)

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Russian-born art director Constantin Mashinskiy has taken to the streets of Paris to document the iconic city’s inhabitants, one striking portrait at a time. The photographer reached out to us to share his impressive series 365 Parisians (365 Parisiens, in French), for which he plans to capture a street portrait of a stranger in Paris every day for an entire year.

Shot in a classical, black-and-white style reminiscent of the aesthetic of old street photography masters, Mashinskiy’s images give a face (or multiple faces) to the beautiful, often romanticized city of Paris. While the series features some of the characters we might expect to see—the sharply dressed gentleman, the intellectual clothed in black, the glamorous and mysterious young woman, the overworked chef taking a quick break—it also depicts a slew of unique individuals who prove that Paris is as diverse as it is stunning. Glimpses of cafes, taxicabs, and cobblestoned alleys in the background flesh out the environment even more, letting viewers fully experience the magic of Paris through Mashinskiy’s expressive portraits.

To keep up with this unique project, be sure to follow 365 Parisians on Tumblr or Facebook.

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Philadelphia artist Kim Alsbrooks recreates historial oil portraits on flattened beers cans and fast food containers. Titled “My White Trash Family” the series was conceived while Alsbrook was living in the south and found herself grappling with prevailing ideas of class. She shares via a statement about the project:

The White Trash Series was developed while living in the South out of frustration with some of the prevailing ideologies, in particular, class distinction. This ideology seems to be based on a combination of myth, biased history and a bizarre sentimentality about old wars and social structures. With the juxtaposition of the portraits from museums, once painted on ivory, now on flattened trash like beer cans and fast food containers, the artist sets out to even the playing field, challenging the perception of the social elite in today’s society.

Filmmaker Jesse Brass recently caught up with Alsbrook to interview her for his Making Art series. Watch it above.

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well FUCK. these are gorgeous!! 

Artist Jess Landau applies delicate, nude portraits on the inside of eggshells. Landau first photographs her models, develops the images by hand in a wet lab and prints them using traditional darkroom methods before she applies them on the shell with the help of liquid emulsion.

The artist states: “There is an overwhelming desire to be independent in our culture, while interpersonal connection and a sense of belonging is necessary for survival. This paradox is fascinating, and is the driving force behind this body of work.”

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Japanese photographer Zuru1024 is mainly shooting portraits of women that he shows on his Flickr.
We’ve seen many pictures from the artist floating around on Tumblr and are glad to finally introduce the talent behind the camera.
He is putting his lens right in the middle of it all, taking intimate, sometimes even provoking pictures. Here are some of our favorites.