Wherever we go, the shadow creeps along. There is no escape. There is noway than embracing it. #light #shadow #sun #day #composition #doll #exposure #elephant
Job of a choice. Many #migrants from lowland of #Nepal come to #Kathmandu and #choose the #profession, such as this, which are usually not picked by the people of the #capital #city. In fact, they're #hardworking and #diligent, and endure hours of #wandering in the #streets. #Winter #Streetvendor #Balloons #instapic #instamag
Brighter roads; darker homes. The frequent loadshedding in the capital city, Kathmandu, has made lives more difficult than expected. #streetphotography #Kathmandu #roadsideattraction #vehicles #headlights #bright #house #dark #loadshedding #instamag #instapic #blockade.
“The language of film is further and further away from the language of theater and is closer to music. It’s abstract but still narrative. Everything feels less rehearsed. It’s more experimental than classical.” - Emmanuel “Chivo” Lubezki
We explore how the cinematography of Emmanuel Lubezki is shaping the landscape of modern film.
Embroidered Landscapes and Plants Overflow Through the Frames by Ana Teresa Barboza
Peruvian artist Ana Teresa Barboza has mastered the art of embroidery and crocheting through the meticulous manual work in the composition of unconventional representation of landscape sceneries.
Beautifully emulating the texture of nature, Barboza’s sculptures burst through the frame into abstract forms. What seems to begin as a conventional piece of embroidery art ends in an explosion of color, movement, and at times gravity-defying suspensions of messy threads.
Emotive and passionate, Baboza links the mechanics and psyche of the human body, particularly, of the fingertips and our need to be connected to nature.
She composes a wide range of landscapes, which depict the violent and unpredictable movement of the water, the uncontrollable growth of life seen in greenery, and the rocky terrain of the mountains. She seamlessly navigates through different color strands, while reconstructing the image of nature we have embedded into our mind. She demands us to view nature and its architecture from a different perspective. Baboza’s work blurs the line between contemporary sculpture and tapestry-making.