Tag: new york city

  • Sam Yocum

    Sam Yocum

    Sam Yocum was born in Texas on a working ranch, as a young boy with camera in-hand he’d ride across the fields shooting pictures of anything that caught his eye. Encouraged by his aunt and uncle, who were fashion photographers in New York, he was shooting proficiently and by age 13 was published, establishing a life-long passion with fashion and beauty photography.

    Today he continues to explore new areas of creativity, and has recently begun directing, bringing his clean, timeless beauty touch to motion. Based in New York City, Sam is known for taking an agency’s creative concept from beginning to completion by producing stunning photographs that create the lead visual branding needed in today’s competitive market. He has worked on multiple re-branding projects with great success for various premiere brands & this work has won multiple awards in various international competitions including the Chicago Athenaeum, ID, Smithsonian Design, Step Inside Design, AltPick and; has been featured in Lurzer’s Archive. His list of celebrities he has worked with includes CEO’s and prominent industry individuals.

  • Sally Mann

    Sally Mann

    Sally Mann is an American photographer, best known for her large black-and-white photographs—at first of her young children, then later of landscapes suggesting decay and death.

    Sally Mann (born in Lexington, Virginia, 1951) is one of America’s most renowned photographers. She has received numerous awards, including NEA, NEH, and Guggenheim Foundation grants, and her work is held by major institutions internationally. Her many books include Second Sight (1983), At Twelve (1988), Immediate Family (1992), Still Time (1994), What Remains (2003), Deep South (2005), Proud Flesh (2009), and The Flesh and the Spirit (2010). A feature film about her work, What Remains, debuted to critical acclaim in 2006. Mann is represented by Gagosian Gallery, New York and Edwynn Houk Gallery, New York. She lives in Virginia.

    “Few photographers of any time or place have matched Sally Mann’s steadiness of simple eyesight, her serene technical brilliance, and the clearly communicated eloquence she derives from her subjects, human and otherwise – subjects observed with an ardor that is all but indistinguishable from love.”
    – Reynolds Price, TIME

  • Lachlan Bailey

    Lachlan Bailey

    Lachlan Bailey is a fashion and portrait photographer currently based in New York City. Originally from Australia where he studied both film and photography Lachlan moved to London in 2001 then to New York in 2008. After assisting other photographers he broke out on his own in 2004 with work in Vogue, i-D, POP and Arena Homme+. Influenced by great filmmakers, his beautifully lit fashion images capture great drama and storytelling. His campaigns and editorials include Avon, Audi, Burberry, DKNY, Ebel, Endless, Louis Vuitton Mens, Cerutti Fragrance, J Crew, Jaeger London, Paul Smith Fragrance, Links Of London Jewelry, Joe Cosmetics, Saks Fifth Avenue, Tory Burch, Uniqlo, Victoria’s Secret, Vidal Sassoon, American Vogue, British Vogue, French Vogue, China Vogue, The Last Magazine, Muse, Harpers Bazaar US, and Twin Magazine.

  • Brad Feinknopf

    Brad Feinknopf

    Mark Bradly Feinkopf’s career started out by assisting famous photographers such as Richard Avedon, Robert Mapplethorpe, Arnold Newman and Joyce Tenneson, and beacause he is also the son and grandson of architects, this might be part of a logical explanaition for his understanding of the architectural photography genre. Feinkopf studied design at Cornell University in New York City. In 1988 Feinkopf returned from working in New York, to his hometown of Columbus, Ohio to establish a photographic studio that would excel in providing its clientele the utmost of quality and service in architectural, interior and corporate photography. An approach to photography, that is both traditional in process yet cutting edge in technology, Feinkopf photography utilizes some of the top digital equipment and superior retouching services available in the industry today. Feinkopf is also a frequent writer and lecturer on architectural photography.

  • Balthazar Korab

    Balthazar Korab

    Balthazar Korab (1926–2013) — architect and photographer, has documented the places where we live and work. His photographs have been exhibited in prominent museums such as; The Museum of Modern Art–New York, The Detroit Institute of Arts, Centre Canadian d’Architecture–Montreal and The Venice Biennale. His work is included in many collections such as; The Chase Manhattan Collection, The Menil Collection and The United States Library of Congress. Korab has authored and contributed to a vast number of publications including; Genius Loci: Cranbrook, I Tetti di Roma, Gamberaia, Columbus Indiana, Encyclopedia of American Architecture, The Saarinen House, and multiple volumes on the works of Frank Lloyd Wright. He is an architect with a passion for nature’s lessons and man’s interventions. His images are born out of a deep emotional investment in their subject. Their content is never sacrificed for mere visual effects, nor is a polemic activism intended to prevail over an aesthetic balance.

  • Scott Frances

    Scott Frances

    Scott Frances was born to a New York city home filled with mid-century furniture, two older brothers and a lot of art on the walls and books on the shelves. His father was a creative director at an advertising agency, and his mother was an editor for decorating magazines. Therefore it is evident he had a very creative background. In Scott Frances’ childhood, he was mostly drawing and painting, often trying to copy Picasso’s. After completing his studies in journalism and art history at Northwestern University, he returned to NYC to work under the auspices of the legendary architectural photographer Ezra Stoller. It was during this time that he began to document the work of the great American modernist architect Richard Meier, a collaboration that spans three decades.

    Scott Frances’ subject matter has always been rooted in architecture and the decorative arts, but as his work has evolved he incorporated people and animals into his images. He became more interested in the atmosphere of the spaces, certainly in their volume and quality of the available light, but also the touch, sound and smell, the mood. Frances never supplements the lighting, instead he shoots multiple exposures, and in photoshop he layers these exposures together to render an image that best captures the sensory experiences of being in the environment. The compositions and narrative themes in his work speaks to recurrent threads found throughout art history.