Read MoreI’m honored to be one of seven artists from four continents selected for “Fragments of Humanity” at Xochi Art Gallery, Portugal. Three of my urban images are featured, reflecting my ongoing exploration of how the mind processes the visual world—not just what is seen, but how it is seen and understood.
A rural Icelandic scene so pristine it looks like a movie set, filled with geometric elements but no inhabitants, draws the viewer forward to a “Vanishing Point” making it an award-winning fine art photograph for its architectural vision in international fine art competition.
Read MoreReflections of vivid red and white patterning on dark waves transform a shimmering water surface into a natural abstraction in “Camden Red,” an award-winning fine art photograph honored recently in the 18th Annual INTERNATIONAL COLOR AWARDS.
Read MoreIntriguing in its simplicity, a lone rural Icelandic church scene evokes clarity and order as a dignified, fitting place for a last stop before the passage to eternity in this newest addition to my ‘Of the Earth’ portfolio.
Read MoreReflections of sky, light, color and patterning transform the sea’s surface into a natural abstraction making STUDY IN TEAL AND GREEN an award-winning fine art photograph honored in the 18th Annual INTERNATIONAL COLOR AWARDS competition.
Read MoreA strange, otherworldly but wondrous landscape of an uninhabited island, ROCK OF AGES was just honored as a Nominee Winner in Fine Art/Nature in the prestigious 18th Annual INTERNATIONAL COLOR AWARDS in international fine art photography competition.
Read MoreI am delighted to share that ALTERNATING CURRENT has just received a Nominee Winner Award in Fine Art among 5,373 entries from 71 countries in the prestigious 18th Annual INTERNATIONAL COLOR AWARDS competition for fine art photography.
Read MoreWhat first appears as a static image becomes a study of energy and movement in ANTI-MATTER, the most recent addition to my RECENT ABSTRACTS and URBAN IMAGES portfolios.
Read MoreNewly installed in collector couple’s residence, IN FLOWS THE GENTLE TIDE OF AUTUMN celebrates the peaceful transition to fall that the lunar tide offers, here at water’s edge of a tidal lagoon where a high tide flows in and gently moves among the seagrasses and reeds, now expressing their autumnal colors.
Read MoreI am delighted that the distinguished architectural furniture design atelier GRESHAKE DESIGN of Wesseling, Germany, is featuring one of my images AUTUMNAL REFLECTIONS in its promotion for its striking, elegant SWORD 1 table.
Read MoreI am delighted to share that PRIMARY has just received a Nominee Winner Award in Fine Art / Abstract among 6,373 entries from 68 countries in the prestigious 17th Annual INTERNATIONAL COLOR AWARDS competition for fine art photography.
Read MoreIn WATER SUITE NO.8, when we come across this scene of utterly simplicity - there are no clouds, the water is still, the light seamlessly revealing itself - we sense that gradually the day is beginning. and we are offered a few minutes of quiet contemplation and reflection.
Read MoreAgainst a deep blue sky WATER SUITE NO.6 captures an atmospheric drama of a lone seabird flying over an expanse of choppy water, while just ahead, rays of sun magically break through an isolated, long, thin white cloud casting light and warmth beneath.
Read MoreWATER SUITE NO. 5 -So gentle a breeze that the clouds seem to strike a pose, barely changing shape as clouds always do. A pastel color palette of pinks, greens, turquoise and blues, like a watercolor, inspires a sense of calm and peacefulness. Slow down, it says, and look upon what this day has given. Clearly, we sense it was a beautiful day and, even better, no hint of a storm to come. To see image larger…
Read MoreSo thrilled to announce receiving a 2nd Honorable Mention Winner Award in international fine art color photography competition, the prestigious 16th Annual International Color Awards, for OTGR. By composing elements of a dynamic, bold abstract pattern of red and yellow lines with the realism of a paint-splattered, dirty city sidewalk below where parallel wavy wet lines on the pavement seem to point to the eye-catching large red OTGR text, I sought to capture some of the duality of urban life and how disparate elements, when framed strategically in the viewfinder, can create an independent harmonious image... To see image large, as well as the reasons graffiti exists, click MORE.
Read MoreI am excited to share that this image of a fumarole venting volcanic gases while eerily distant figures appear shrouded in vapor received an Honorable Mention Winner Award in the prestigious International Color Awards 16th Annual international competition. among 6,573 entries from 72 countries.
Read MoreWhen an interior designer had a much traveled contemporary fine art collector client with a passion for all things Italian, she remembered a DC gallery’s solo exhibition of my work which featured a suite of images of water reflections on the canals in Venice. After reviewing the WATER IMAGES portfolio online and narrowing the choices, subsequently both the designer and her client came to my studio to view the work in person. I am delighted to announce the acquisition of UNTITLED #1, VENICE, an image of gently moving, sensuous water reflections creating an abstract composition with patterns, shapes and organic earth tones in ochre, brown, terracotta, white and blue. To see installation image, click “MORE.”
Read MoreTHIS WEEK’S PICTURE OF THE WEEK, a solitary figure appears to be savouring solitude while walking along a windswept beach at low tide in early April. Taken from a very high perspective (not a drone) overlooking the wide expanse of beach on which the lone man is strolling, the line of wet sand where the tide has come in and receded until the next wave, the patterned foamy surf beyond, the waves breaking in the distance - each visual element seems to occur in sequential horizontal bands. That’s the visual side of what prompted me to capture the moment you see.
Read MoreThis big, bright, beautiful glowing full moon, THIS WEEK’S PICTURE OF THE WEEK, MOONRISE, became visible just above the trees at twilight. The still barren tree branches, almost like acolytes, seemed to rise up to the light of this strikingly luminous last full moon of the Northern Hemisphere’s winter. Why does the moon appear so yellow? Why is it called the Worm Moon? … click MORE.
Read MoreCurious, enigmatic image of mannequins’ legs clustered near one another outside a clothing store in Venice, Italy, STAND BY ME joins work by art luminaries Richard Serra, Hank Willis Thomas, Roni Horn, Nicole Eisenman and Alice Neel, along with other talented artists, offered in the Friends Seminary Contemporary Art Auction Preview at David Zwirner, 533 West 19th Street, NYC, February 23 and 24. Backstory of the image, and how to bid online, click MORE.
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