So hello, I'm Josh, and I'm a photographer living in Seattle. I take pictures of the city and of industrial places around the Pacific Northwest, but you wouldn't necessarily know that from looking at my work. I seek out rusty, weathered surfaces and crop out the surroundings, mostly, so though there may be a small identifying detail that gives a sense of size or place, for the most part the images just become pure abstractions of color and form.
And that's what I like about them - they're pretty and gritty and fun to look at. It doesn't need to go any deeper in meaning than that (unless you want it to, of course - be my guest!). I want people just to enjoy them because they're neat looking! Plus I think it's cool that they kind of look like paintings, and I love printing them out on huge stretched canvases to emphasize that effect. I'm ridiculously new at this, and 2010 marks the first year that I've decided to make my work public. Even though I grew up in a household with a photography professor and an art historian/art journalist for parents, I was always dissuaded from pursuing any sort of career in the art world (strange, right?), so I sort of kept my light under the proverbial bushel until recently. And how do my parents feel about my work now that I'm in my 40's, you may ask? I'm happy to say they've come around and they're extremely supportive. Hooray!
clearing - I love the little patch of blue just aching to open up amid all the rust and become open sky.
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And that's what I like about them - they're pretty and gritty and fun to look at. It doesn't need to go any deeper in meaning than that (unless you want it to, of course - be my guest!). I want people just to enjoy them because they're neat looking! Plus I think it's cool that they kind of look like paintings, and I love printing them out on huge stretched canvases to emphasize that effect. I'm ridiculously new at this, and 2010 marks the first year that I've decided to make my work public. Even though I grew up in a household with a photography professor and an art historian/art journalist for parents, I was always dissuaded from pursuing any sort of career in the art world (strange, right?), so I sort of kept my light under the proverbial bushel until recently. And how do my parents feel about my work now that I'm in my 40's, you may ask? I'm happy to say they've come around and they're extremely supportive. Hooray!
clearing - I love the little patch of blue just aching to open up amid all the rust and become open sky.