Huxley-Parlour Gallery, founded in London in 2010, is a forward-thinking modern and contemporary art gallery. Representing over 25 artists and estates across a wide range of mediums, the gallery’s dynamic program is committed to creating a dialogue between those artists who have made an impact on recent art history, and those who are at its vanguard today.
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ClampArt represents a wide range of emerging and mid-career artists of all media with a specialization in photography.
Discover and share the best in contemporary photography
ClampArt represents a wide range of emerging and mid-career artists of all media with a specialization in photography.
ClampArt represents a wide range of emerging and mid-career artists of all media with a specialization in photography.
Olaf Otto Becker: Reading the Landscape buch kaufen pdf hörbuch ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ [pdf] Olaf Otto Becker: Reading the Landscape hörbuch download zusam...
Since 2003, photographer Olaf Otto Becker has been documenting the decline of the glaciers and ice sheet in Greenland. Gr
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For this beautifully tragic series titled Above Zero, photographer Olaf Otto Becker daringly trekked through approximately 2,500 miles of Greenland's
Huxley-Parlour Gallery, founded in London in 2010, is a forward-thinking modern and contemporary art gallery. Representing over 25 artists and estates across a wide range of mediums, the gallery’s dynamic program is committed to creating a dialogue between those artists who have made an impact on recent art history, and those who are at its vanguard today.
Dramatic frosty shots by Joe Shutter, a talented British-Brazilian photographer, and adventurer now based in Reykjavik, Iceland. Joe captured some royal
“I visited a glacier in Iceland again and was shocked by this new encounter. The glacier tongue had retreated significantly in just a few years…It was immediately clear to me that we were dealing with a change that was significant for all of humanity.“
Olaf Otto Becker a réalisé de superbes photographies de paysages glacés au Groenland, en Islande et aux pôles. L’Allemand veut ainsi montrer au monde entier les dégâts dus au réchauffement climatique à travers la fonte des glaces.
ClampArt represents a wide range of emerging and mid-career artists of all media with a specialization in photography.
POINT 660, 08/2008 Photograph (c) Olaf Otto Becker /All Rights Reserved Becker photographed glaciologist and climate researchers, Konrad Steffen and seven scientists, at their measuring station, Swiss Camp, where they work on predicting the planet's future. Even at Point 660, a popular tourist spot, taking photographs of one another proudly in this formidable landscape may soon be over. RIVER 3, POSITION 1, 07/2008 Photograph (c) Olaf Otto Becker /All Rights Reserved Olaf Otto Becker | Above Zero photo-eye Magazine Becker is a modern day explorer, no less a pioneer than his famous "pole fever" predecessors, from Carsten Borchgrevink, the first Norwegian explorer to set foot in Antarctica, to Ernest Shackleton's well-known Endurance expedition. Between 2003 and 2006, Becker traveled a total of 2,500 miles up and down the coast of Greenland in a rigid inflatable boat...One hundred years from now his photographs may be all that's left to view of this extraordinary world. — From Elizabeth Avedon's photo-eye Review of Above Zero purchase: photo-eye Bookstore
Summer in Siberia? What does that feel like? Is Siberia perhaps a new travel destination we didn’t know about? How is climate change making itself felt there? In several books of photographs Olaf Otto Becker has already documented the alterations in landscape caused by climate change, as well as the influence of human behavior on nature. He became world-famous for his pictures of icebergs, whose beauty is captivating, even in the face of their melting. Now, the photographer has turned to the permafrost zone and its gradual retreat northward. He captures the inhospitable formes of earth and ice that tower above wet beaches, looking like abstract sculptures; follows a group of researchers who were taking soil samples during the “warm summer” of 2019; and finally lands in the semi-decaying harbor town of Tiksi, where children also play. An unusual, new Becker! OLAF OTTO BECKER (*1959, Travemünde, Germany) studied communications design in Augsburg, as well as philosophy and political science in Munich. His photographs can be found in exhibits and important collections worldwide. His books with Hatje Cantz include Broken Line (2017), Ilulissat (2017), Reading the Landscape (2014), Under the Nordic Light (2011), and Above Zero (2009). Also available as a special edition with an original print.
May 17 – July 7, 2018 Opening reception: Thursday, May 17, 2018 6:00 – 8:00 p.m. ClampArt is pleased to announce “Olaf Otto Becker: Ilulissat”—the artist’s first solo show with the gallery. The exhibition coincides with the artist’s new monograph Ilulissat: Sculptures of Change—Greenland, 2003-2017 (Hatje Cantz, Hardcover, 9.8 x 11.2 x 0.5 inches, $55). [...]
Trekking the vast, icy inland of Greenland is no easy task, especially while lugging a large-format camera. Photographer Olaf Otto Becker did just that, navigating the glacial crevasses and melting ice floes — physically challenging and often…
For this beautifully tragic series titled Above Zero, photographer Olaf Otto Becker daringly trekked through approximately 2,500 miles of Greenland's
Voir l’article pour en savoir plus.
May 17 – July 7, 2018 Opening reception: Thursday, May 17, 2018 6:00 – 8:00 p.m. ClampArt is pleased to announce “Olaf Otto Becker: Ilulissat”—the artist’s first solo show with the gallery. The exhibition coincides with the artist’s new monograph Ilulissat: Sculptures of Change—Greenland, 2003-2017 (Hatje Cantz, Hardcover, 9.8 x 11.2 x 0.5 inches, $55). [...]
Trekking the vast, icy inland of Greenland is no easy task, especially while lugging a large-format camera. Photographer Olaf Otto Becker did just that, navigating the glacial crevasses and melting ice floes — physically challenging and often…
“I visited a glacier in Iceland again and was shocked by this new encounter. The glacier tongue had retreated significantly in just a few years…It was immediately clear to me that we were dealing with a change that was significant for all of humanity.“