Jo Paul Wallace | Jo Paul Wallace is one of two winners of the Street Photography Now Project. He tackled every brief head on, moving deftly between black and white and colour, creating witty, moving, political and consistently energetic images. He’s a fearless street photographer whose frames are packed with strong characters and expressive gestures. Week 34′s Instruction was “get stuck in the thick of it” – Jo Paul Wallace did that every week, thrusting hands and feet, birds and plants, cameras and phones, smoke and mirrors right into the foreground of each visceral shot. Find Jo Paul Wallace on Flickr Instruction #2 “Turn your attention to the four-legged population” – Ying Tang Instruction #10 “Photography like an assassin; suddenly and silently” – Osamu Kanemura Instruction #12 “Look for the stars, even in broad daylight” – Markus Hartel Instruction #13 “Look closer to home” – Lars Tunbjörk Instruction #24 “Follow the money” – Stephen McLaren Instruction #39 “Don’t ask.
Like this: Like Loading... Most popular. Jack Simon | Jack Simon is one of two winners of the Street Photography Now Project. Consistently original in his interpretation of the weekly Instructions, Jack Simon set a soaring standard for the project. HIs intelligent, multilayered photographs combine a rich sense of pattern and a powerful use of light and shadow with plenty of mystery. Jack Simon sees a photograph where almost everyone else would miss it, and has the quick-wittedness and technical prowess to get the shot every time. Find Jack Simon on Flickr Instruction #1 “If you can smell the street by looking at the photo, it’s a street photograph” – Bruce Gilden Instruction #2 “Turn your attention to the four-legged population” – Ying Tang Instruction #5 “Get lost in a thicket of signs and structures” Wolfgang Zurborn Instruction #13 “Look closer to home.” – Lars Tunbjörk Instruction #26 “If you’re not sure it’s a picture, shoot it anyway” – Carolyn Drake Instruction #29 “Find an ambiguity that lies just below the surface.” – Jesse Marlow.
Favorites. 52 Weeks of the Street Photography Now Project.