Ryane nicole

Artist Statement coming soon…

https://www.ryanenicolephoto.com/

 

Rudy ATALLAH

I began dabbling in photography while serving in the first Gulf war. During the course of my military career, I found myself carrying a camera on most trips, excited to capture new landscapes and events. In 2001, while stationed in West Africa, I purchased my first digital camera and put together a portfolio about the Sahara, which eventually turned into a book. After I retired in 2009, I teamed up with world-renowned photographer David Brookover who helped me refine my skills. My passion for landscape photography and love for travel keeps me on the road searching for new adventures.

 

amr el-shafei

Artist statement coming soon…

 
 

grEGORY ESSAYAN

What I seek to evoke in my work is a feeling, a mood, an emotion. A sense of a place and a time. I am an observer selecting and carefully framing literal reality into a pure, distilled, two dimensional essence. A hyper-condensed curated reality, if you will. An ode to a subject that may be savored, studied and enjoyed by a viewer in their time and over time.

 

In order to realize my vision I employ the finest cameras and lenses available. Currently, I am using the 150 megapixel Phase One IQ4 paired with Schneider-Kreuznach and Rodenstock lenses, Phase One or Alpa camera bodies and always mounted on a firm tripod. I feel this system, although heavy and often challenging to use in the field is currently the best available tool for recording the subtleties of light, color, detail and mood that are paramount to me in my work.

 

My large (up to 120 inches long) Limited Edition prints are made using the finest quality materials available. Collectors may select either a traditional silver halide photographic print developed on FujiFlex photographic material and then face-mounted and sealed under plexiglass or an archival pigment print on Hahnemuhle Fine Art Baryta archival paper carefully backed, over-matted, framed, and covered with UV attenuating anti-reflective glass. Either process results in the creation of a fine art piece with extraordinary detail, richness, nuance, depth, and permanence.