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Mark Laita is an American photographer born in Detroit. He discovered photograpy at the age of ten when he moved to Chicago with his Lithuanian parents. After college in Chicago he worked as a commercial photographer for two years before he moved to L.A. in 1986. Mark’s photography has since been featured in numerous campaigns like Mercedes-Benz, Visa, Adidas, Van Cleef and Arpels. He has also been the photographer for most of Apple’s products for the last ten years.
Beauty Pageant Contestant – Topless Dancer
Astronaut – Alien Abductee
Amish Teenagers – Punk Teenagers
Marine – War Veteran
Homeless Man – Real Estate Developer
Gang Member – Mafioso
Fur Trapper – Woman with Dog
French Chef – Short Order Cook
Polygamists – Pimp
Baptist Minister – Ku Klux Klan
Motorcycle Gang – Altar Boys
The ‘Flowers‘ collection below is photographed after his mother was diagnosed with breast cancer. He printed these flowers and sent them to her every several days during her chemotherapy.
The following photos from Sea is a collection of animals that live underneath the liquid surface and on how they reflect against their mirror image above.

Click here for more of Mark Laita’s work.
Posted in Uncategorized
American photographer Bobby Neel Adams is mostly known for his unphotoshopped ‘photo surgery’ work. He takes two photos, rips them apart and puts them together to address the similarities and the physical change of the human body.
These photos features couples, family members and two photographs of the same person at different times (as a child and as an adult).
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Jason deCaires Taylor is a sculptor that created the world’s first underwater sculpture park in Grenada, West Indies. Jason spent most of his childhood in the Malaysian coral reefs where he developed his interest and love for the ocean. After graduating from London Institute of Arts in 1998 he worked on art installations where after five years he gained enough knowledge to put his own unique projects into action.
Seven meters below the surface in Cancun, Mexico, you will find one of his projects called The Lost Correspondent which futures a person sitting behind a desk with a typewriter which is a symbol to represent our rapid changes in communications. Another one, 5 meters below the surface, you’ll see 30 cement life-size moulds of children symbolising the cycle of life.
As you may know, roughly one-quarter of coral reefs worldwide are already considered damaged almost beyond repair and Jason has certainly kept that in mind. Following text is from his page -”One of the greatest benefits of artificial reefs is that they have lifted the pressure off natural reefs which, over the past few decades, have been over-fished and over-visited. By diverting attention to artificial reefs, natural reefs have now been given a greater chance to repair and to regenerate”.
This underwater museum has been very successful in encouraging coral growth. The sculpture based on Sienna, a character from a story written by a Grenadian author Jacob Ross, is a sculpture designed to allow currents to pass through which provides a structure for filter feeding organisms to colonise.
To read more about Jason and his stories behind the work click here or to see the world’s largest underwater museum featuring 400 statues live, go directly to Punta Cancun in Mexico. When you get there it’s $40 for a snorkel, $65 for a one-tank dive, and $70 for two tanks.
‘The gardener of hope’ is surrounded by pots containing live coral cuttings saved from coral reefs that were damaged from visitation and hurricanes.
‘The Silent Evolution’, installed 8 meters deep behind the Manchones Reef, is a documentation on how we, along with our society, changes both socially and physically starting from Mayan times up to today’s society.
This sculpture weighs over 1 ton and was cast from a local Mexican fisherman named Joachim now called ‘Man on Fire’ because the 75 holes planted with small live cuttings of fire coral are expected to grow like fire.
The messages in these bottles are written by various communities who wrote about the today’s values and their hopes and dreams for future generations.
Posted in Sculptor
“My present approach evolved out of what seemed at the time to be an artistic cul-de-sac:
damage to the nerves in my forearm from the single-minded pursuit of pointillism. Forced to
think of other ways to create art, I began pushing myself to experiment with new mediums: my
torso, a tricycle, X-rays, dandelions, the Bible, key phrases out of audience stories, and so
on. The selection of the medium became integral to the art, as much a part of the story and
the holistic experience as the selected fragments themselves”. – Phil Hansen
more of his stuff @ philinthecircle.
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Adelto, an online magazine that contains breathtaking travel destinations, interior design and luxury properties from all over the world.
The links below takes you to the companies behind a few of the amazing properties and interior designs above.
Finchatton
Rigby & Rigby
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Kim Simonsson is a Finnish ceramic artist. He makes life-sized statues of people and animals with inspiration from Japanese manga. He creates his work with materials like ceramics, glass, silvered glass polyester filler and car paint. He has exhibited in places like Sweden, France and Germany.
More of his stuff here.
Posted in Sculptor
American David Horvitz is an New York-based photographer and conceptual artist. Josiah Hughes asked David in an interview if there is a central theme surrounding all of his projects. David Horvitz answered “anything is possible anywhere at anytime. And to … Continue reading
Maps of stereotypes that different nations have about European countries. By Bulgarian graphic designer and illustrator Yanko Tsvetkov.
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Lucas Lima is an amazing Brazilian graphic designer, now studying in Stockholm at Hyper Island’s Interactive Art Director program.
“-I like the analog and the process. I look for the concept before the code and I never have enough time.
I’m older than I should be and believe that most of the people don’t get what they really want because they don’t even try.”
- Lucas Lima, taken from luklima.
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I’m a big fan of Ellen’s work, here is a very mild and a very small collection of her stuff. “I’m just trying to make beautiful pictures. I don’t see my works as exploitative. They’re just cheeky, they’re fun, and … Continue reading
Canadian-born artist Gregory Colbert started his career in Paris making documentary films that soon led to his work as a fine arts photographer. In 2002, he launched the Ashes and Snow exhibition in Italy at the Venice Arsenale, a 125,000-square-foot shipyard owned by the Italian navy. It is filmed and photgraphed from places like India, Burma, Sri Lanka, Egypt, Dominica, Ethiopia, Kenya, Tonga, Namibia, and Antarctica.
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I was in a friends house where the walls were dressed with it. …..it …..it ..it.. It was photos by Daniella Midenge, a Swedish talented fashion and portrait photographer. It’s amazing too look at her truly outstanding work and the … Continue reading
Lit, colored and clicked perfectly down the fashion road by Norwegian, Sølve Sundsbø. . The pictures are taken from numerous of different pages through the world wide web. He is represented on Art + Commerce.
I shoot people. With one foot in romance, dreams and ethereal elegance and the other one firmly fitted in pure rock n’ roll I shape my artistic footprint. – Axel More on axelengström.