
SASHA KATZ
“Inspired by pop art, I am trying to aestheticize objects of mass culture. I am interested in both nostalgic fetishes from the pre-digital age as well as popular objects of today.” Sasha Katz presents her hypnotic Gif art.
Archive Collective Magazine
An independent publisher of contemporary fine art and photography.
“Inspired by pop art, I am trying to aestheticize objects of mass culture. I am interested in both nostalgic fetishes from the pre-digital age as well as popular objects of today.” Sasha Katz presents her hypnotic Gif art.
“My subconscious is totally programmed to find strong lines, symmetry, shadow play and colours. I never go out with a place to photograph already existing in my mind.”
A true devotee to the technical craft underlying analog photography, Nora develops all of her photos herself in her darkroom. We caught up with her about her life, her art and her inspirations.
28 Pieces in Memory of the Sun | My everyday experience of noticing informs my process of making. I respond directly to my external and internal environments, which in most cases is reflective of my studio and its surroundings.
This series of photos of Slovenja by Kimberley Dhollander transforms the hard world into a soft, bubblegum-like piece of happiness.
Nico Castro is a creative designer and director from Buenos Aires, currently based in Spain. His fresh approach combines art, craft and digital techniques with an acute sensitivity to space, materials and lighting,
There is a particular intimacy which Paul Gaffney’s project ‘We Make the Path by Walking’ acknowledges, the feelings that every person experiences but does not slow down to understand or allow themselves to accept. Written by Clare Callaghan.
Explore Australia The scope of coffee table books and small handouts that depict a stereotypical Australia are endless. Giving an over saturated rendition of blue skies, half naked men and woman, beaches and landscapes. Attempting to show a utopian country of blistering heat and kangaroos. But that’s just not what it’s all about, of course […]
Ben Thomas’ latest series, Chroma, uses colour as the primary constructive method to present a hyper-real representation of urban contexts; breaking spaces of everyday life down into their most elementary colours and shapes.