Taj and Train, Agra, Uttar Pradesh, India, 1983. Steve McCurry. Art Print on Fujiflex Crystal paper.

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Taj and Train, Agra, Uttar Pradesh, India, 1983. Steve McCurry. Art Print on Fujiflex Crystal paper.
Mornings in February
magasin photo-graphie daniel juvancy
Poésie naturelle
Glam Jail by Pol Kurucz
Concept
Glam Jail is a Franco-Brazilian tale by photographer Pol Kurucz about 11 eccentric inmates transforming a prison visitor’s booth into a colorful fashion haven. Through visual allegories and pop aesthetics the photographer challenges social and racial norms symbolized by the carceral universe. The shootings took place in the Offen Studio in Sao Paulo in August 2017. The series features local models, celebrities and dresses exclusively from local fashion brands.
The photographer
Pol Kurucz was born with two different names to a French mother in a Hungarian hospital. His childhood hyperactivity was treated with theater, and theater was later treated with finance. By 27 he was a CEO by day and a stage director by night. He then went on consecutive journeys to Bahrain and Brazil, to corporate islands and favelas. He has sailed on the shores of the adult industry and of militant feminism and launched a mainstream moneymaking restaurant loss making in its indie art basement. Then he suddenly died of absurdity. Pol was reborn in 2015 and merged his two names and his contradictory lives into one where absurdity makes sense. Today he works on eccentric fashion and fine art projects from his Sao Paulo studio. His photos have been featured in over a hundred publications including: Vogue, ELLE, Glamour, The Guardian (Arts), Adobe Create, Hunger TV, Sleek and Nylon.
Credits
Photography and Art Direction: Pol KuruczStyling: Carolyna MelloSet design: Nina SimaoLighting and Tech.: Guilherme GrieblerAssistants: Lara Ferro, Mary Cruz, Claus Pinheiros, Monica Rodrigues
New York City, 1940. Lou Stoumen. Silver print.
Human kindness has never weakened the stamina or softened the fiber of a free people. A nation does not have to be cruel to be tough.~ Franklin D. Roosevelt, Democrat.