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| 03/14/2014 10:37:56 AM |
Microphoneby mrchhasComment by tanguera: Charming and whimsical, with a twist. Congrats on the tt. Where did you get that phone??? Message edited by author 2014-03-14 10:38:20. |
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| 03/14/2014 09:48:01 AM |
Microphoneby mrchhasComment by gyaban: Yes, it is excellent indeed! What a fantastic concept, clever and full of humor. Congratulations on the nice finish. |
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| 03/14/2014 05:05:36 AM |
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| 03/14/2014 04:50:11 AM |
Microphoneby mrchhasComment by tome: Wackiest of them all, I love this! You should eat more at that restaurant of yours :). |
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| 03/14/2014 12:46:08 AM |
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| 03/13/2014 08:57:55 AM |
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| 03/13/2014 08:38:39 AM |
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| 03/13/2014 05:53:54 AM |
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| 03/12/2014 05:01:51 AM |
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| 03/10/2014 10:07:20 AM |
Soporificityby mrchhasComment by rooum: From my jury duty....
'This was one of my top two photos. It does the wonderful trick of being far more than it first seems to be. Some photographs drag you in; this one drags you in, gives you a chair and tells you that you are going to be here for quite a while. It's glossy, superbly photographed in its mechanical, architectural way but has layers upon layers of depth. Compositionally it is repetitive. This is great. I love repetition, whether it is visual, musical, literature or verbal. It's like a mantra. There is a common misconception that repetition fogs; it clouds and muddies to produce a fugue. This is often not the case - a mantra of a number of words repeated a thousand times eventually breathes new meaning and life into each one and each one morphs and changes with each breath. I'm reminded of that with this photo. Each window, each stairwell. There are a hundred stories being told - a knocked over chair, a clicking of high heels down a corridor, a desperation, a closing and opening of doors. The fact that there is not a single person to be seen heightens the glamour and story. It is building as narrative at its best. There is a coldness, of course; the cold steel and sickly yellow insect hum of the light. The sound of photocopiers and printers churning out endless reams of papers to fall in a pile on the floor when no one is there to pick them up. The title, 'Soporificity' does seem to be at odds to my interpretation somewhat. It's a good title but i'd say that this is one of the most uncontrollably awake photographs in the challenge. Of course, often you never feel more awake than when you are asleep. ' |
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