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All photography is in part self-portraiture; what’s in back of the camera is just as important as what’s in front of it. If you want to make better pictures, work on becoming a better person. In the end, that’s what we’re all here to do.
Ed Freeman
"I keep coming back to photographer Ed Freeman’s work — in particular, his underwater images. Freeman is considered a highly controversial artist for his open use of Photoshop in his art:
I’m not particularly concerned with reporting on the world the way it is. There are lots of people out there who are doing that far better than I ever could. I approach photography as if it were painting; my pictures are about the way I want the world to be. I take photographs just like everybody else, but Photoshop manipulation is an integral part of my workflow and really the creative center around which everything else revolves. It’s hard to pigeon-hole me because I work simultaneously in a variety of styles – so many, in fact, that I’ve had to put up two different websites to cover them all. But what everything I do has in common is computer manipulation – sometimes subtle, sometimes massive.
I love the ethereal quality of his pieces. They remind me of a modern day version of John William Waterhouse’s 1890s paintings, in particular Hylas and the Water Nymphs. And, of course, they remind me of ballet.
Ed Freeman, interview: Qufoto: http://www.qufoto.com/interviews/ed-freeman " (http://www.crumbbums.com/?p=10615) undefined