Tale #8 - DESERT LAKE
Created in Death Valley during a wildly colored sunset, DESERT LAKE portrays a truly rare phenomenon, a lake in the middle of the desert. Right after a storm, Cottonball Basin in Death Valley fills with water and transforms, for a very short while, in a lake. It took me years of repeated visits to be able to create this truly unique image.
USA 2017 | 5000 x 3333 px
ABOUT TALES OF TWO WORLDS
Reflections are a deep, philosophical subject more than a photographic one for me, and one I love exploring and working on at any chance I get.
Photography is never real; it’s just a bi-dimensional representation of a four-dimensional reality. Photography is an interpretation of reality. Reflections are optical illusions, mere perceptions of reality. I always considered reflection photographs to be images telling tales of something in between two worlds.
To tell my tales, I often like to introduce elements breaking the perfect symmetry of my reflections; visual anchors, points of interest, or simply something hidden in the image, something that you can’t really see but it’s there if you look for it.
Photographing reflections is an exploration of the interplay between what we perceive as real and what is just a perceived image of that perception. This collection is a 4-year slice of that exploration.
Reflections are a deep, philosophical subject more than a photographic one for me, and one I love exploring and working on at any chance I get.
Photography is never real; it’s just a bi-dimensional representation of a four-dimensional reality. Photography is an interpretation of reality. Reflections are optical illusions, mere perceptions of reality. I always considered reflection photographs to be images telling tales of something in between two worlds.
To tell my tales, I often like to introduce elements breaking the perfect symmetry of my reflections; visual anchors, points of interest, or simply something hidden in the image, something that you can’t really see but it’s there if you look for it.
Photographing reflections is an exploration of the interplay between what we perceive as real and what is just a perceived image of that perception. This collection is a 4-year slice of that exploration.
Tale #8 - DESERT LAKE
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityExpirationFrom
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityFloor DifferenceExpirationFrom
Tale #8 - DESERT LAKE
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityExpirationFrom
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityFloor DifferenceExpirationFrom
Tale #8 - DESERT LAKE
Created in Death Valley during a wildly colored sunset, DESERT LAKE portrays a truly rare phenomenon, a lake in the middle of the desert. Right after a storm, Cottonball Basin in Death Valley fills with water and transforms, for a very short while, in a lake. It took me years of repeated visits to be able to create this truly unique image.
USA 2017 | 5000 x 3333 px
ABOUT TALES OF TWO WORLDS
Reflections are a deep, philosophical subject more than a photographic one for me, and one I love exploring and working on at any chance I get.
Photography is never real; it’s just a bi-dimensional representation of a four-dimensional reality. Photography is an interpretation of reality. Reflections are optical illusions, mere perceptions of reality. I always considered reflection photographs to be images telling tales of something in between two worlds.
To tell my tales, I often like to introduce elements breaking the perfect symmetry of my reflections; visual anchors, points of interest, or simply something hidden in the image, something that you can’t really see but it’s there if you look for it.
Photographing reflections is an exploration of the interplay between what we perceive as real and what is just a perceived image of that perception. This collection is a 4-year slice of that exploration.
Reflections are a deep, philosophical subject more than a photographic one for me, and one I love exploring and working on at any chance I get.
Photography is never real; it’s just a bi-dimensional representation of a four-dimensional reality. Photography is an interpretation of reality. Reflections are optical illusions, mere perceptions of reality. I always considered reflection photographs to be images telling tales of something in between two worlds.
To tell my tales, I often like to introduce elements breaking the perfect symmetry of my reflections; visual anchors, points of interest, or simply something hidden in the image, something that you can’t really see but it’s there if you look for it.
Photographing reflections is an exploration of the interplay between what we perceive as real and what is just a perceived image of that perception. This collection is a 4-year slice of that exploration.