EIFFEL PATTERNS - PHILIPP KLINGER
Philipp Klinger is an architectural photographer, who finds patterns from buildings to photograph. An example of his work would be ‘Eiffel Patterns’.
In this photograph, the photographer has experimented using angle, by taking it from worm-level looking up into the centre of the tower itself. This giving the effect that one is standing underneath the Eiffel Tower and looking up themselves. This adds depth to the image because we’re seeing the pattern of the Eiffel Tower more as its not being taken at eye-level where we might miss all these lines. He has also experimented using framing, instead of including unecassary parts of the tower, he has cropped into his particular focal point which is the middle of the tower which gives us as a viewer a new point-of-view of the Eiffel Tower that we may of never seen before. He has also captured diemsion in this photograph, by not making it look 2-dimensional, but from this angle shows all the 3-dimensional lines. This then emphasises what the photographer is taking a picture of and what he wants to show the viewer, this might lead to many thoughts about this photograph which I like because some might think deeply about this or not really think about it at all.













