Showing posts with label street photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label street photography. Show all posts
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
LSP Magazine is now online
Hi streettogs!!!
We are pleased to announce that the site is finally online. LSP Magazine will be a showcase for street photographers, but also a magazine with tips, reportages, news, interviews and ideas about street photography.
The interest in street photography is increasing day by day, and we are street photographers who want to build an important reality through a passion. We have great ideas and a lot of energy.
So what are you waiting for? Please, visit our website:
LSP Magazine
Etichette:
lsp magazine,
magazine,
online,
showcase,
street photography,
website
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
JULIEN COQUENTIN FEATURED ON LSP
Julien Coquentin
I was born in France in 1976 but now live in Montreal, Canada, where I practice the profession of nursing at night. I never studied photography, I’m just in love with images, shadows and raindrops, gray light and stories … I do not have an expanded curriculum vitae and I walk every day in my city with camera in hand…I am a passer concentrated…photography has eaten my mind for the past four years…
"This series comes from a photographic journal that I keep every day since I arrived in Montreal with my wife and our daughter one year old in April 2010 and for a few months.
Name of Portfolio : "Early Sunday morning"
It was to learn to shoot by making a poetics of the city and distance, my work at night at the casualty department - I'm male nurse - allowing me to spend part of my life to this work.
From the beginning we lived in Mile End, migratory crossroads where come and go French Canadians and English, Portuguese and Greeks, Italians, Polish and a large population of Orthodox Jews, a district sandwiched between Park Avenue and St Lawrence Boulevard, between the plate and Little Italy, a few blocks to the contours with the boundary of two black lines in the snow: A railroad track and passing trains of the Canadian Pacific Railway.
The America that once I started to photograph belonged to a landscape dreamed that I had discovered as a child in front of the television and in the dark of a movie theater, the kids from here made me think of my distant childhood in Aveyron, seasons mingled with my memories, snow and whiteness with cold winters of Aubrac, a clear "boralde" to the eddy of St Lawrence. It therefore would appear to be my mind that, over time, I photographed in the streets but also the memories to come of children who grow up. I liked the morning to find myself in a calm, feel the rain or the heat of the first rays of the sun, and I liked to leave the casualty department, impregnated with the smell and mood of the others, photographing the silence, the snow and his dancing, watching the well-oiled rhythm of a crowd which moves off, night work has the virtue to make swim against the current. From splitted days to pale nights, the trip became wandering, those that Depardon described in his book "eponymous", real drunken onlooker on the boulevards of Montreal.
Geographical representation of a limited space, this newspaper is also, and perhaps most importantly, a window overlooking the interior on which the viewer will put his forehead to look at himself, because a picture is never that a mirror which reflects our history.
The title of the series "Early Sunday morning" is borrowed from Edward Hopper, who painted this painting in 1930, preserved today at the Whitney Museum in New York. I authorized myself this borrowing first because I recognize myself in the way Hopper watched a city and more generally our civilization, but also because Sunday I think is a particularly day, a silence in time, a little death.
Photography requires attention and it took me staring Montreal to build this series. "Early Sunday morning" is also the testimony of the changing nature of the city, like our face will become hollow over the years, the city constantly changes, dies and is reborn. From the movement of atoms, "hopeless fragility of the city", I tried to extract two years, here also a silence in time, here also a small death."
Camera/Equipment used:
nikon d300, 50mm, 18-200mm, yashica mat 124 (portra + tri X), olympus om-1
WEBSITE :Friday, December 2, 2011
LAURENT ROCH FEATURED ON LSP
For as long as I can remember, photography has always been an important part of my life. Throughout the years, taking photographs has been part of who I am ; instinctive.The emotional power, the esthetic pleasure and the visual language of a photograph have never ceased to fascinate me.
At a time when technical perfection has become so important, I prefer the simplicity in photography , that slight distortion of reality. What I look for first and foremost is that unique, fleeting moment. That special moment that, in an instant disappears and is lost forever. In this “open air theatre” of everyday life, I try to capture life in its purest form. Nothing staged, no role playing. I go simply with the flow of what is unfolding around me. When luck offers me just what I am looking for, when everything is just perfectly and naturally in place, in harmony, all I need to do is act on my intuition.
A constant desire to express, as strongly as possible, the spontaneity of the moment. I try to blend in, unnoticed, to observe, to wait, to play with the natural light, to find the perfect angle and finally, to capture the ultimate “decisive moment” (l’instant décisif) so dear to Cartier-Bresson.
I am constantly looking for new places to explore, new ways of seeing the world, always with a view to satisfying my natural curiosity – a subject of never-ending inspiration.
Laurent Roch :
http://www.laurentroch.com
Thursday, December 1, 2011
THOMAS LEUTHARD FEATURED ON LSP
My name is Thomas Leuthard, I am a street photographer based in
Switzerland. I love to travel the world to document ordinary life onthe street. My interest in humanity brings me close to strangers, Ihave never met before, just to make an exposure with my camera. Thereis nothing more challenging than getting in interesting photograph outof a orginary and boring scene on the street. This is what I'm walkingdown the street for every time, again and again. I want to show theWorld my view of the different life on the street. It keeps me hungryfor the perfect street photograph.
Thomas Leuthard
85mm Street Photography
http://www.85mm.ch
http://www.flickr.com/photos/thomasleuthard
http://lspfeaturedphotographers.blogspot.com/
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
JASON MARTINI FEATURED ON LSP
Jason Martini
I first fell in love with photography in the dark room, developing black & white images in high school. I put the film camera down in college and studied Advertising. I moved to Chicago in 2000 and began a successful career in technology sales.
Photography was always in my mind and I got tired of taking pictures with my eyes. I picked up the camera up again in 2008.. in digital and began living the dream.
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