American Photographer Gregory Crewdson,is best known for his elaborately staged large-scale
film-like homes and neighborhoods according to Photography & Cinema. His book Twilight contains a series of forty photographs
that explore "domestic landscape and its relationship to an artificially
heightened natural world." As the book overview further explains, "The
collision between the normal and the paranormal in these narrative images
produces a tension that serves to transform the topology of the suburban
landscape into a place of wonder and anxiety.” Our fascination lies with how he
juxtaposes real with surreal and the amazing command in light manipulation for
atmosphere. Following photographs by Gregory Crewdson.
Korean self-portrait photographer Ahn Jan in nerve racking dangerous heights as she dare devils and dangles off edges. Following photographs by Ahn Jan.
French photographer Cerise Doucède depicts suspended objects in ordinary life to create what My Modern Metropolis cites as, "mysterious moments where inanimate objects come to life in a whirlwind of chaos." It takes three days to attach the objects to string and to set up one scene. Following photographs by Cerise Doucède.
Following photographs by Bruno Dayan
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