Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Artist- Natalie Shau

www.gothicteasociety.com

The gorgeous work of Natalie Shau.






More information and where to purchase her work HERE

Monday, March 26, 2012

Photography- Motohiko Odani

www.gothicteasociety.com

These outstandingly beautiful macabre photos are by Motohiko Odani






More wonderful photos HERE

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Gothic Vogue Italia

www.gothicteasociety.com

Vogue Italia
Photography by Steven Meisel


 



Friday, March 9, 2012

Goth Chic~ Kate Moss

www.gothicteasociety.com

The March 2012 issue of W Magazine features Kate Moss in a wonderfully dark and creepy series of photos by Steven Klein. On newsstands now!








Thursday, March 17, 2011

Civilization

Pretty cool group of pictures here. Not gothic or anything...but really neat to see.


Infrastructure

Sunday, March 6, 2011

The Motionless Dream



This lovely book is available now. I sent for my own copy the moment it was available. I love it.  The book can be ordered HERE

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Colma~ City of the Dead









Here are some of my photos from my recent trip to the San Francisco area. More on the history of Colma and our trip can be found here

Monday, May 11, 2009

The Magic Lantern





The magic lantern or Lanterna Magica was the ancestor of the modern slide projector. 1671: A projecting lantern is described in Ars Magna Lucis et Umbrae, by the Jesuit Athanasius Kircher in 1671. He was describing an already existing device familiar to and employed by the Jesuits since the mid sixteenth century. With an oil lamp and a lens, images painted on glass plates could be projected on to a suitable screen.
19th century: a thriving trade of itinerant projectionists travels around the United Kingdom with their magic lanterns and a large number of slides to put on shows in towns and villages. Some of the slides came with special effects, by means of extra sections that could slide or rotate across the main plate. One of the most famous of these, very popular with children, was The Rat Swallower, where a series of rats would be seen leaping into a sleeping man's mouth. During the Napoleonic wars, a series was produced of a British ship's encounter with a French navy ship, ending patriotically with the French ship sinking in flames, accompanied by the cheers of the audience.





The invention of photography enabled the inexpensive creation and reproduction of slides, and thereby greatly expanded the repertoire of available images. Slide shows would feature famous landmarks, foreign lands, and personages. Posed photographs were sold in series, telling uplifting stories and moral tales. Though there was a huge market for these lanterns and slides in the 19th century, they eventually fell out of favour after the invention of moving pictures, and the few surviving lanterns and slides are sought-after collector's items.
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