(vía dinocgsaurio)
(vía dinocgsaurio)
(vía dtmofokers)
(vía dtmofokers)
(vía dtmofokers)
(vía dtmofokers)
(vía dtmofokers)
(Fuente: p4int-the-w0rld, vía suckafree1)
In Jorge Pineda’s installations, children that seem to come out of a pop-up book (although faceless and anonymous) wear themselves away on a corner or the far end of the room. Although we can’t see them face to face, we are confronted with an image that is hard to bear, but at the same time draws us in for its enigmatic qualities. These images stand for the invisible faces of children in conflict around the world.
With his series “Smoking Kids”, Belgian photographer Frieke Janssens focuses on the issue of smoking, drawing the viewers attention on the aesthetics of smoke and the particular way smokers gesticulate with their hands and posture.
Water sculptures by Shinichi Maruyama.