funkaoshi
Well-known
That lens is pretty damn flat. Impressive looking set up.
Wow, school is school everywhere, its aways a few key individuals who make it happen in the sea of incompetence. Now for the hard part, what elements make an Avotius picture, I could say that the 3 art history classes I took gave me an eye for elements that make up a artists signiture but that would be a copout. First off, your composition is great, you have a way of framing the "ordinary" in a way which makes it interesting. Along that same line, the subject matter is alway striking. Coming from the Northwest, I have to go out of my way to find decay. Your pictures are always...Lush with decay/lived in/finely aged goodness. You also use the full spectrum of light and dark, I like how there is often patches of complete black in your pictures (at least on my monitor 🙂 ) I'm also struck by what must occur behind the camera, your pictures have an intimacy, I figure you either are invisible, do alot of interaction with your subjects, or people in China don't mind having thier picture taken. But the intimacy makes the viewer really feel like thier walking down the street. There are other technical things like sharpness and stuff but those are minor, its the atmosphere that really shows through. I'm not sure if this is much of a critique, if you were writing a history paper I could give you an honest critique with things that you could improve upon, but in the world of photography I can find little fault with your work.
I love sichuan, especially the food and girls there 😀 If you love spicy food and spicy girls, Sichuan is THE place you have to visit once in your life time.
The Northwestiest, Seattle. I currently live in southern washington (Sunnyside) but when asked I say Seattle, I'm only visiting Sunnyside until I get back home. I wish people were as laid back here, which is kinda funny because of the reputation that Seattle has for being laid back. Its truely becoming a big city, cold/clean/private. But I still love it! 🙂 As for history, your pictures do convey a lot of history, something China has in *****s compared to the U.S. What is interesting is to see the old and the new together, there is an organic feel to many of your pictures, as if power lines grew like vines into buildings which existed prior to electricity. There is also a "pre-industrial feel," which is kind meanless because China was really industrial before the West, but the patterns of life seem to be suspended in time, as if the same people were living in the same manner for generations. But I ramble, and I'm on a borrowed line so more later 🙂
Wow it censored *****s. You know the card suit which is also a shovel...
I'm late to the party here, but let me add to the heap of praise, especially of that alley shot. That is just a stunning photo--you have a great eye.