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ekayyne
Uzbek Women Attend School; Uzbek Socialist Soviet Republic, USSR - David King
Niger, 1953. From the book Nomades du soleil by Henry Brandt
Roma, 1951
Herbert List
Untitled Painting Source: rearte
Motel
Your fine back in a shabby room Dark hair, one smokey eye upon me With the rest huddled toward The thin wall
My wants Your cold shoulder
Just one more midnight bargain Leaving me cooling Haphazardly In the precarious office chair
A Gideon bible on My knee.
-Skye
Diane and Amy Arbus, New York City, 1963
Soaring through the night skies
H. Hilterman, Father and son with Christmas tree (1949)
The image is a work of art created by English artist Häri Ren.
Häri Ren blends traditional painting, modern digital techniques, photographic composites, and elements of generative artificial intelligence to create his works.
His works often capture the energy of places and people that don't fit into defined categories.
Online comments attributed to the artist suggest that the work may evoke feelings related to homelessness or difficult life situations.
The piece depicts two figures, likely in a context of poverty or hardship, with a window revealing a deep, threatening red sky.
The image shows a black-and-white photograph capturing a moment of urban life with two men in the foreground and a graffiti on the wall.
The photograph was taken by renowned Czech photographer Josef Koudelka.
Koudelka is known for his humanistic, poetic style and bold compositions.
He began his career photographing gypsies before dedicating himself fully to photography in the late 1960s.
Budapest, 1992
Gotas de lluvia
Bruno Bourel
Bill Brandt (British born Germany, 1904-1983)
Northumbrian Miner at His Evening Meal, 1937
Lena Rivo (American), Moonlit Winter Walk, 2025, Soft pastel on Canson Mi-Teintes Velvet light gray paper
Kawase Hasui (1883 - 1957)
Hasui was a great master of the twentieth-century shin-hanga (new prints) school. His talent for capturing a mood, illustrating a scene, and drawing the viewer into the image makes for some of the most appealing Japanese woodblocks ever created.
Born in Tokyo in 1883, Kawase Hasui was always interested in art. He studied ukiyo-e and Japanese-style painting at the studio of Kiyokata Kaburagi. He also studied Western-style painting for a couple years. He had taken over his family’s wholesale rope business, but it failed when he was in his twenties, and he turned to art as a career.
Hasui spent most of his adult life as a woodblock printmaker. Unlike earlier ukiyo-e artists whose landscapes typically featured famous sites, Hasui was one of the first artists to record the unknown rural places and urban corners that he found so captivating. He traveled often and recorded the scenic wonders of Japan with drawings and watercolor paintings, which became the basis for many of his prints.
In the face of rapid modernization during the twentieth century, Hasui's prints evoke a sense of nostalgia for old Japan and a respect for traditional culture. His romanticized views emphasize the beauty of the natural landscape; figures are absent or often small and insignificant in comparison. Hasui was known for his spectacular snow, rain and night scenes. These wonderful atmospheric landscapes are among his best work.
A prolific artist, Hasui created about six hundred woodblock print designs during his long career, the majority of them for publisher Watanabe Shozaburo. In 1953 the Japanese government bestowed its greatest artistic honor on him by commissioning a print, Snow at Zozoji Temple, and designating it as an Intangible Cultural Treasure.
The photograph was taken in 1967.
The shot is by photographer Erich Hartmann. The scene depicted is New York City, during a winter snowfall. The photo, titled "Snow in New York," captures a moment of everyday life, showing a woman inside a vehicle observing passersby on the street in the snow.