photo
< arts visuels
< Arts
< chaacattac
Get flash to fully experience Pearltrees
By EDW Lynch on December 5, 2011 “Evolution” by photographer Ted Sabarese is a portrait series that compares people to their fish lookalikes. With all the recent, fiery controversy between evolution, creationism, intelligent design, science, religion, the political left, right, etc., I thought it might be provocative to throw my visual two-cents into the ring. The images beg the question, is it really so difficult to believe we came out from the sea millions and millions of years ago? via Curiosity Counts
La boite verte :) :o :'( :p :/ :D ಠ_ಠ <img src="/img/twitter.png" alt="Twitter La Boite Verte"/> <img src="/img/facebook.png" alt="Facebook Page La Boite Verte"/>
Now its time for KOREA, TAIWAN AND TOKYO. If you live here and want to participate in my project, email me amazing old pictures to : backtothefuturepics@gmail.com Riff Raff 1976 & 2011 London Andy 1967 & 2011 Los Angeles Johanes 1994 & 2011 Hamburg Maarje 1990 & 2011 Amsterdam
This new series looks at mass phenomena that occur on a global scale. Similarly to the first Running the Numbers series, each image portrays a specific quantity of something: the number of tuna fished from the world's oceans every fifteen minutes, for example. But this time the statistics are global in scale, rather than specifically American.
« Je veux parler de l’être humain, des dualités et contradictions de la vie; les anciennes traditions et les nouveaux rituels, le naturel et le supra naturel, religieux et païen, douleur et plaisir, humains et dieux, corps et esprit, eau et terre, vie et mort » explique la photographe espagnole Cristina Garcia Rodero, membre de l’agence Magnum . Et comment ne pas être rémué(e), comment ne pas s’interroger en effet lorsque l’on regarde les clichés qui suivent ? Between heaven and earth by Cristina García Rodero Magnum Photos from Eva Filgueira on Vimeo .