A small house situated next to a busy street. In a village where only people pass by to their destination. A house in which all was staged by photographers unfortunately. The worst kind of staging I ever experienced. Please visit www.preciousdecay.com for more pictures and follow my adventures on Facebook on www.facebook.com/preciousdecay If you like my work and you would like a piece of me on your wall, please contact met for sizes, prices and materials.
With his ethereal and dreamy photography, Antonio Palmerini projects an imaginary and distant world. His evocative and emotional images portrait half-formed and vague figures, silent...
For six years, Cleveland, Ohio photographer Brandon P. Davis, 26, has researched old spaces, taking sombre yet breathtakingly beautiful pictures of their interiors, which have long been forgotten by their human inhabitants.
Explore Irma Haselberger's 172 photos on Flickr!
With his ethereal and dreamy photography, Antonio Palmerini projects an imaginary and distant world. His evocative and emotional images portrait half-formed and vague figures, silent...
Timo Sälekivi the artist Interview:Αnnita Apostolaki, Art-Historian & Νikolena Kalaitzaki, Art-Historian for »the frouctor» magazine / December 2015/ Athens, Greece Why did you choose paint…
The incredible images include one of gunners pushing a truck filled with shells in 1917 and a British soldier helping a wounded German prisoner walk a...
The Battle of the Somme, also known as the Somme Offensive, was one of the bloodiest battles in WWI. During the first day alone, 1st July 1916, there were
A lot has been said about the role of artillery in World War I, in both its intensity and ferocity. On the opening day of the Somme on July 1, 1916, British guns hurled 250,000 high explosive and s…
places we love exist only through us, space destroyed is only illusion in the constancy of time, places we love we can never leave, places we love together, together, together, and is this room really a room, or an embrace, and what is beneath the window: a street or years? and the window is only the imprint left by the first rain we understood, returning endlessly, .... when you go, space closes over like water behind you, do not look back: there is nothing outside you, space is only time visible in a different way, places we love we can never leave. from places we love ivan v. lalic
These fascinating pictures are some of the first ever taken of the city of Bristol. They were taken between 1850 and 1855 by photographer Hugh Owen and could fetch up to £30,000 at auction.