Genre art Color photo


William Eggleston is an American photographer. He is widely credited with increasing recognition for color photography as a legitimate artistic medium. Eggleston's books include William Eggleston's Guide (1976) and The Democratic Forest (1989).


Youssef Nabil is an Egyptian photographer and artist living and working in Paris and New York. His work includes photography, painting, video and installations.
Nabil grew up in Cairo on films made during the golden age of Egyptian cinema, which strongly influenced his tastes. Nabil's distinctive technique of hand-colored silver-gelatin prints erases the stains of reality. Nabil shatters common notions of color photography and painting, as well as notions of the aesthetic sensibilities associated with art and pop culture.
Nabil is known for his photographs of Egyptian and international celebrities: Catherine Deneuve, Omar Sharif, Tracey Emin, Zaha Hadid, Robert De Niro and Marina Abramovic are just some of the many icons of the art and film world that Nabil has captured. Like all of his photographs, each portrait is made in the characteristic technique of hand-colored silver-gelatin prints. Nabil's numerous self-portraits reflect his feelings of loneliness, exile and longing. They also play with the notion of time. There is no time in Nabil's work; he lives and dwells in some other world of dreams.


Judith Samen is a German photographic artist.
She studied at art academies in Münster and Düsseldorf and her works include photography, spatial installations, drawings, videos and performances.
Judith Samen's art moves between staging and the authenticity of human existence. Her work involves corporeality, food and elements of art history and everyday life. She formulates works between poetry and radicalism in her search for unseen and moving pictorial creations. She combines vulnerability and humor, transience and deep physical awareness with tragedy and comedy, in the process expanding the familiar into the absurd.


Larry Sultan was an American photographer and artist. He is known for his innovative and evocative photographic work that often explores the boundaries between documentary photography and staged narrative.
Sultan's work is characterized by his interest in the relationships between people and their environments, and he often incorporates everyday settings and objects into his photographs. He is perhaps best known for his seminal work, "Pictures from Home," which is a deeply personal exploration of his own family and their suburban life in Southern California.
Sultan's work has been exhibited in galleries and museums around the world, and he has received numerous awards and accolades for his contributions to the field of photography. He was also a highly respected teacher, and he taught photography at the California College of the Arts and other institutions for many years.
Sultan's legacy as an artist and photographer continues to influence new generations of artists. His innovative techniques and unique approach to photography have had a significant impact on the field of documentary photography, and his work remains an important contribution to the history of photography.


Nichole Velasquez is an American photographic artist.
He explores the detachment of color and form from their descriptive functions on analog film. His goal is to allow the emotional experience to take center stage in interpreting the work. Velázquez works with analog film, exploring emotional memories through the technique of multiple exposures. He worked with material scientists at the Technical University of Berlin to create silver plates, using mirrors as mediators for human color perception.