This is an awesome collaboration between French art director Alexis Persani and French photographer Leo Caillard. Persani digitally dressed classical sculptures with the latest fashion trends. They created the series to show the vast change from classic to contemporary culture.
Awesome double exposure series by Lisa Bamford. Her use of double exposure makes recognizable buildings and monuments much more interesting. The best part is, the shots are all done in camera.
"I enjoy taking photographs because of the enormous creative scope it provides. I am generally attracted to simplicity in either subject or composition, which is down to my background and job as a graphic designer. I see the structure of photographs in the same way as I do a layout, and I like them to be easy to read. I'm also a bit of a magpie and so take inspiration from all sorts of styles of photography, and so will shoot different subjects in different ways. I'd get bored to tears if I had to design the same thing everyday and that translates to what I point my camera at.
I generally choose my travel destinations based on places I think will be photogenic as that's what I enjoy doing most while I'm away. I find making double exposures an effective way of producing interesting images of buildings or monuments that have been endlessly photographed. It also appeals to me as the images often look quite graphic and hopefully not like the usual tourist snap."
Ross Mcewan is an illustrator from London UK. His work combines beautiful illustrations of women with elements from nature.
Sweet series for Porter Grey's SS 2011 Lookbook. I like the concept of using backdrops as settings, but it probably could have been better executed.
A great series of fashion photographs that look like paintings.
Here are some very interesting and surreal works from Bulgarian artist Lyubomir Serge Sofia (I'm sorry if I am mis-representing this artist's name, but I'm getting the information from a translation of Serbian.) He creates some very stylized imagery which force you to come up with a story to match the picture. Any piece that can do that is well worth noting.
These photos are from mostly from different projects, but they all have one thing in common, great use of light. Dan Holdsworth has found a way to compose interesting photographs by using different light sources as an emphasis. He's used everything from the beam shining out of a mountain, to the aurora borealis to a solitary lampost. I'm not sure whether this has been done on purpose, but it is quite effective.
In his series Architecture of the Mind, Jonathan Beer paints his exploration of the mind and a parallel landscape to represent his mental processes. In the painting above, we have the destruction of landmasses taking place in the sky.