Month: August, 2009

Studio News

August 27, 2009 12:06 pm | Gallery Newsletters | 1 comment

STUDIO NEWS – In keeping with our professional photographic services and workshops that include related subjects such as Lightroom and PhotoShop.

Nude Photography Workshop:
In this age of suppositional freedom and growing economic confinement, evaluating outcome by the numbers is fatuous.
On the other hand, the Nude Photography Workshop provided a wealth on knowledge on the nude through [...]

Discovery Right in Our Own Back Yard

August 25, 2009 8:31 pm | Discoveries | No comments

Completing the writing on the photo art scene in the Big Apple helps in getting a better perspective on what is happening locally.  I like it, but sadly it is way under appreciated between fellow artists and the public at large.
I’ve enjoyed going to many openings: Those in the immediate vicinity, such as the Michael [...]

6:18 pm | Gallery Newsletters, Photo Studio News | 1 comment

STUDIO NEWS – In keeping with our professional photographic services and workshops that include related subjects such as Lightroom and PhotoShop.

Nude Photography Workshop:
In this age of suppositional freedom and growing economic confinement, evaluating outcome by the numbers is fatuous.

On the other hand, the Nude Photography Workshop provided a wealth on knowledge on the [...]

How Was It Done – Madalina Iordache-Levay

3:58 pm | How was it done? | 3 comments

How Was It Done: “A Quest for Beauty” by Madalina Iordache-Levay.
Madalina is a special artist, combining interesting and thoughtful concepts with a talent to masterfully combine photo based elements to complete her personal vision. Below, in her own words, she talks about the making of one of her amazing visual images.

Definitely one of [...]

Big Apple Photo Art Scene, Part 3 (conclusion)

3:01 pm | Gallery Newsletters | 1 comment

BIG
APPLE
photo
art scene
part 3

“The photographer Hans Lullig is an intellectual visionary. His photographs deliver a hard edged style of realism from everyday life. The photograph at the right, titled upside-down, expresses a corrival relationship between illumination and shadow, without the intensity of either. Lullig’s strong and unique signature and optical perspective avoid need [...]