Posted by Knut Skjaerven | April 19, 2012 | Categories: barebones communication | Tags: Long Tall Sally | Leave A Comment »
Posted by Knut Skjaerven | October 19, 2011 | Categories: Exhibition | Tags: Arno Fischer | Leave A Comment »
Posted by Knut Skjaerven | May 6, 2012 | Categories: Uncategorized | Leave A Comment »
Posted by Knut Skjaerven | February 16, 2012 | Categories: barebones communication | Tags: Strickly Ballroom | Leave A Comment »
Posted by Knut Skjaerven | February 15, 2012 | Categories: barebones communication | Tags: Condensed Concert | Leave A Comment »
Posted by Knut Skjaerven | February 7, 2012 | Categories: barebones communication | Tags: Returning To The Ritz | 2 Comments »
What About Henri Cartier-Bresson? The Lightness Of Life. Click image to read article on Eric Kim’s blog. Or click right here. Enjoy.
Posted by Knut Skjaerven | February 1, 2012 | Categories: barebones communication | Tags: Eric Kim, HCB, Henri Cartier-Bresson, The Lightness Of Life, The Musician | Leave A Comment »
Posted by Knut Skjaerven | November 30, 2011 | Categories: barebones communication | Tags: Lazy Layers | 4 Comments »
Posted by Knut Skjaerven | November 30, 2011 | Categories: barebones communication | Tags: Different Directions | 3 Comments »
Posted by Knut Skjaerven | November 30, 2011 | Categories: barebones communication | Tags: Open Daily | Leave A Comment »
Posted by Knut Skjaerven | November 30, 2011 | Categories: barebones communication | Tags: Behind Bars | Leave A Comment »
The first thing a photographer learned was that photography dealt with the actual; he had not only to accept this fact, but to treasure it: unless he did, photography would defeat him.
He learned that the world itself is an artist of incomparable inventiveness, and to recognize its best works and moments, to anticipate them, to clarify them and make them permanent, requires intelligence both acute and supply.
John Szarkowski: The Photographers Eye, The Museum of Modern Art, New York 2009.
Graham:
I have just spent an intriguing and enjoyable hour exploring your blog. Looking more closely than I have done. Your work is in one sense quite representational, but still conveys an almost abstract quality – I guess it’s about how you (the photographer) and us (looking at the work)’frame’ and interpret, in a way disrupting the view… I’m not familiar enough with the theory / vocabulary to express this clearly. I guess what maters is that these photographs made me think, made me question – and made me smile. Thank you for that.
September 10, 2010 at 11:01 am
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