Let’s start the week with some exceptional nature and landscape photography.
Have a look at the work of a Norwegian photographer, Klaus Axelsen.
Thank you, Beatrice Hermanns, for recommending him.
Until next time,
Tomasz
Let’s start the week with some exceptional nature and landscape photography.
Have a look at the work of a Norwegian photographer, Klaus Axelsen.
Thank you, Beatrice Hermanns, for recommending him.
Until next time,
Tomasz
No posts
A few of the pictures certainly look like they could have been painted but that adds to the amazing skill involved in their execution. Lovely.
As I once commented here, to quote Frank Zappa, “talking about art is like dancing about architecture.” But here goes—I don’t know why except that, for me, artistic preferences are visceral reactions—I know immediately when I look at a painting or a photograph whether I like it. If I do, I enjoy looking repeatedly. You may suppose that I know nothing about art, but I do, quite a lot in fact, thanks to the constant exposure to it that I have enjoyed for many years. My husband is a photographer. He holds a BFA and an MFA from Stanford and was the single student accepted into both programs in the years he entered each one. He taught all of the undergraduate photography classes while at Stanford, and he later taught photography at a small college, so I have been fortunate enough to be intimately exposed to this wonderful art for many years. And I am a painter, and a fairly good one, I believe, for being self-taught. We have traveled to museums here and abroad and our home is filled with art, our own and works of others. Enough! I am not an art snob. Either I like something or I don’t and I’m not going to waste time talking about it. Forgive me, but you remind me of the visceral reaction I had many years ago to a blank canvas “painting” at a museum in San Francisco when patrons were staring at it in apparent awe—laughter and a quick exit!