““Street photography” is used to generally describe the practice of shooting straight photography in public spaces. The intent in documenting life in this way is to sift through the trite, the banal, the mundane and depict the humorous, ironic, and contextually interesting aspects of society. The way we interact next to and near each other is often fascinating.” - Considering Street Photography — On Photography — Medium

Catch-22

Poet K. Parkins-Brown @ BAR 

Alvin Pang @ Woolfson & Tay

Working Man @ Fix Whitecross Street



Yomi and N. 

N. Eyes up. 

Baby A, upstanding

Adam Mansbach @ Young Chicago Authors, early 2013

Fix, Whitecross Street, London



Skaterz gonna skate. Barcelona, 2013.

“Produce your work to the very best of your ability. Send it out into the world. Listen to feedback, but measure it against your instincts. Learn from the feedback, but don’t supplicate yourself to it. Produce more work to the best of your ability. Be honest with yourself. Strive for deeper understanding and expression with all you’ve got. Give your work and yourself time to mature. Finish things so you can let go and move on. As has been so often said, even a fool who persists may eventually become wise. Then produce more work and plunge deeper into the process of awareness and expression. Soon, you will no longer care about the terms used to describe your work — snapshot or “Fine Art.” Do not confuse the map with the territory.” - Brooks Jensen, When does a photograph become a work of art? (via photographsonthebrain)
“He favors raw light and has a penchant for shooting into it, but said he ultimately focuses on getting out of the way. “That’s how you get something way more authentic, way more cerebral, way more visceral,” he said. “Just be a custodian of the moment. Step back. Watch.”” - Bradford Young, Cinematographer for ‘Middle of Nowhere’ - NYTimes.com (via daniellescruggs)