Camera Work

Here is a photographer I recently found. His style is maybe a little disaffected, but I really like the overall effect. Its certainly a departure from the images shown here so far. Take a look, if you'd like.

http://www.matthewgenitempo.com/

W - that is some great work, thanks for sharing the link. I wasn't seeing a disaffected style at first, more of a retro / 70's feel in both content and the look. But as I viewed more, and with images such as "Beef's Ass - high society diptych", the disaffection really came through.
 
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A find Philip Toledano's 'Days With My Father' a real moving story rich of a sense of humanity and made by extraordinary pictures. I did not know this work, thank shyoon for the link.
robert
 
"Days With My Father" was really moving. The images really capture the fragility of his father's life. The text was wonderful too. Thanks a lot, Shyoon.
 
Photoshop? No, thanks...it was 1963...

Photoshop? No, thanks...it was 1963...

A friend of mine pointed me at http://sokolsky.com/ work, which I find amazing because of the capacity to merge phantasy and technical ability. One sentence from him I appreciate is :"The camera is like a musical instrument; it takes many years of practice to become a virtuoso and it is the same with a camera. If I don’t shoot for a week I get rusty." I hope you enjoy his work, speciallty the bubble serie.
robert
 
Hadn't read intro post well enough ("content should reflect published/unpublished photos or photojournalistic collections (stories) we want to share") - so removed Kenro Izu reference in previous post.

I don't think Cyrille Rabiller has been mentioned ("le vrai rdu" here on RFf):
http://cyrillerabiller.net/
His North Sea Series is excellent (there's a thread HERE at RFf as well).

Also, I just saw the work of Pawel Glogowksi in a thread titled not only about street shooting.
His site is: http://www.glogowski.art.pl/
 
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