Posts Tagged ‘the guardian’
Of Humour, Ants, and That ’Orrible ‘Glamour-Dimmer’
A Myrmecologist’s Gallery
DPReview writes that ant fights include “brutal take-downs that rival UFC brawls.” Poetic flight of fancy, straightforward facts, or something in-between? Look at this photo and you will be able to make a quick and correct decision.
DPReview’s very specialized story on ant Macro Photography is about the strange passion of Alex Wild who seems to have photographed ants in many parts of the world and seems to know a lot about their loves and lives to the extent that his website has a special section devoted to ‘Ants Fighting’ and has a top-level heading, ‘Ants’ where you’ll find out that, besides being a photographer, Wild is also a ‘Myrmecologist’!
All that explained, most any photographer interested in Macro Photography will be blown away by Wild’s photographs of insect warfare.
A Humourist’s Gallery
How would you like to tickle a brown bear under the ‘armpits’ and make it howl with pleasure? At least that’s what someone in a photo by camera-toting funnyman Zack Seckler seems to be doing – and to a wall-mounted stuffed animal, at that!
If that joke is a little too ‘hairy’ for you, how about a lion patiently waiting at a deer crossing?
PetaPixel has just run a story on Seckler’s photographic pranks and visual puns. There is no doubting his imagination and his technical skills to execute his vision with a camera. Seckler’s website has a whole section under the heading ‘Humor’ that’s loaded with whimsies galore.
Seckler’s humour and artistry combined and found a high point in a marvellous photograph of some type of monkey or lemur in a barren, dead tree in a desert!
Any photographer who feels jaded and needs a ‘shot’ of inspiration might want to pay a visit to Seckler’s online gallery.
A Celebrity Passport-Picture Gallery
Okay, let’s double up on humour, shall we?
Sarah Gilbert and The Guardian are surely severely starstruck: this oh-so serious, snooty and high-minded newspaper says that celebrities’ “true glamour” cannot be “dim[med]” even by that terrifying and notorious glamour-dimmer (shudder!), the “brutality” (sic) of the “photo booth”
Leaf through this gallery to view an airbrushed pic of Marilyn, a flaky-looking Virginia Woolf, a scary, zombie-like Janis Joplin, and a waxwork of Whitney. Whoever finds ‘true glamour’ here should try his/her chances searching for Long John Silver’s pieces of eight.
You’ll be chuckling and giggling all the way, not only at the photos, but, at The Guardian getting all silly and dizzy about funny photos.
The Guardian’s Best Photographs of 2012
Having seen the photographs our press have chosen as their ‘Best Photographs of the Year’, it may be interesting to compare what the media mavens in Old Blighty and those across the (big) pond over in America consider to be their Photos of the Year, courtesy of The Guardian and TIME respectively.
We’ll cover The Guardian’s selection in this post, specially the dramatic and dynamic images, and review those of TIME in today’s post on our sister site.
Unlike TIME’s 366-photograph smorgasbord, The Guardian provides a far smaller selection of what are for the most part photojournalistic and editorial images, a few of them with considerable impact. Like the very first one showing half the island of Manhattan plunged in darkness. Compare with another aerial shot of another city – Aleppo – that was plunged in darkness but for very different reasons: shelling and bombs.
The newspaper seems to have asked the photographers behind the chosen images to write a few lines describing the ‘whats’ and ‘wheres’ of their images, plus what they mean to them. Though these textual vignettes are sometimes self-glorifying or try to put over a less-than-first-rate photograph, at other times they shed light on a cryptic or amusing image – like this one of, shall we say, ‘Bathing Beauties Chinese Style’? The photo and the mini-story complement one another very well.
The vignette, though so well-written, is superfluous for this brilliant shot evoking pure joy; indeed, a sense of euphoria, at an Obama election rally. Likewise for another Obama photograph: a lovely photograph of a heartfelt embrace between man and wife. This would be, and is, a wonderful photograph regardless of who the subjects are.
The very next image, possibly the most carefree and dynamic one in the gallery, is one for which the photo and the description play off one another. (Indeed, a very similar photograph of Palestinian Parkour was featured in one of our posts.)
Not to be missed is another photograph from the Islamic World. Would you believe a brilliant blue burqa and an array of laserlight speckles dotting the frame makes for an exceptionally pretty photograph? Compare with a photograph with another kind of ‘speckles’ – real sparks from real flames. That’s what this horseman is riding through in a very dramatic image of a religious festival in a remote Spanish village.
If these dynamic and dramatic images are not to your taste, you’ll find more sober ones if you browse through the gallery. So go ahead, with our Best Wishes for 2013 to all our readers.