SEARCH
|
|
Photography by Davide Barzaghi
Texts by Giancarlo Tonani
Published the 30st of May 2025
About Davide Barzaghi
Born in Asti in 1976 and raised in a small town in Monferrato, I moved to Rome to attend the faculty of psychology at La Sapienza University. I became a father at a very young age and on that occasion I started my business as an entrepreneur from scratch. Always passionate about art and design I discovered photography in 2020, self-taught and in parallel with the development of a rare neurological disease that impaired my ability to walk and speak fluidly. Since that day, capturing images has become my way of communicating, expressing my ideas and conveying my emotions. I shoot exclusively with my iPhone camera, without using additional lenses or photo retouching or post-production softwares. Over the years I have been shooting nonstop, constantly searching for my precise identity and a technique that would allow me to express the complexity of the gaze. I portray the everyday, look for the dazzle of an eternal instant, dive into my depths to search for the light of the soul. Glances, naked bodies, essential sets, uncanny compositions, the presence-absence of life declined in its daily flow, ghosts suspended between the real and the imaginary, between memories and hopes.
More than 400 published images, more than 150 award-winning, 3 realized projects exhibited in museums, galleries, venues in Italy,France, Germany, Spain, South Africa, United States, Brazil, Switzerland, England, Japan, UAE, Principality of Monaco. Olympus has fallen, circus the abandoned future and now Afterlife: three projects that tell my life, my language, my world. I have had the good fortune to meet on this journey collectors and critics who have found my works introspective, interesting, worthy of being proposed to a wide audience, and enhanced through exhibitions and displays. Currently my project Aldilà is on display in Milan, Barolo and Asti, in the coming months it will be on view in Monte Carlo, Alassio, Berlin, Dubai, Palma, Zug and Turin.
I thank every single collector, every critic, every publisher, every visitor, every sponsor, I thank all those who have made this journey possible and have been passionate in front of my emotions.
'A.D. 2023'
'Potremmo essere Felici'
'Pagine'
GAPS
'Il Buio Dentro'
'Il Vizio'
'La Fine dell'Estate'
SUR-REALITY
'Res/Rei'
'Nuda'
'Mi Vendo'
'Il Vuoto'
EDEN HORIZON
'Imprevisti'
'La Bambola'
'La Lettera'
LOVE AND WALL
'Respiro'
'Incompresioni'
'Aldilà'
See more here [370] Davide Barzaghi
About AlDiLà - The àgalma of the everyday
Agalma is a word that harks back to the original meaning of a precious little gift: a little thing, in its customary use value, is invested with the sense of an elegant and rare choice, and is thus charged with those valences, affective and even intrusive, that gifts have. It is linked, by analogy, to the reflowering myth of the sculptor Pygmalion who falls in love with his statue to the point of wanting to make a living being out of it. Hence, also through the high road of Plato's Symposium, the metaphorical meaning of treasure hidden in an object, in a game, in a story, in an image, in a person. With the direct gaze in this sense, one can grasp the agalmatic value of everything. A shining, a light of special vividness can pop up in the everyday. It is readable in this direction "AlDiLà." And it moves toward a twofold adventure, visual and symbolic.
First of all, toward the search for a photographic style, starting from the way of framing the scene, to the strategies of cutting, of choosing the detail, to the recurring games of shadows, of contrasts, of details that return as small, sometimes hidden signatures of the author. Also at work in this research is unconscious perception, a “tropism” (to use the word used by a great photographer, Ralph Gibson) that, as if by pulsional attraction, orients the photographer toward a shot that becomes “his own,” a sign-spy of his inner world, of his own very particular way, largely unknown to himself, to interpret reality.
That is why the expressive figure of “AlDiLà” should be sought even among photos that belong to distant themes; precisely the recursiveness of particular uses of the medium, sometimes obvious, other times very subtle, ends up bringing them into dialogue.
There is, then, a symbolic structure that presents itself right from the title of the exhibition. The set of photos gradually dissolves the open evocativeness of that “overcoming,” that “beyond.” So many doors appear in the pictures, revealing details of the force with which the theme of the gateway, the threshold, the open-closed, dark-light contrast plays, suggesting as the emotional center of this work the confrontation with critical moments of life, with the psychological incandescence of daily living. There is an adage, Pirandellian and Montalian, that “life is either written or lived”: variously declined by exponents of the full range of art forms, from painting to music to photography, it can be interpreted in two opposite directions. Art is so demanding that it becomes the bottomless pit of vital energies.
Or, rather, art is vitality, it is life capable of enhancing life, giving it meaning, allowing personal experiences to access the boundless system of the symbolic, where pain, love and the infinite range of emotions resonate, acquire perspective depth, can find a space for elaboration and sharing.
Interpreting an idea of photography using essential shots with an Iphone to probe a liberating gateway, one that inputs to “horizontal” values, with ample recourse to lightness and irony: thus, this complementary intention of AlDiLà produces an overall effect of surrealist minimalism, in the continuous oscillation between the essentiality of the scenarios, simple and everyday, and the “in focus” scenes, the point-strength of the image, often demystifying and ambiguous, so much so that it often gives the sensation of being in front of projective solicitations: a Thematic Apperception Test in photographic version.
There play in counterpoint the “veil” of hedonistic pleasantness, even with the use of glossy glamour, and the “tears,” something that screeches and bumps forcing a confrontation with limit, lack, pain, inescapable emotions of human experience. On the one hand, then, the brightness that in the marked contrasts of black and white caresses the nakedness of bodies. There we find a strong “tropism”: the central, and richest part of “AlDiLà” focuses on the 'Eden of the sensuality of the female body.
But equally strong, and capable of creeping even among the luminous veils, the “tear.” Of course in this the medium, the fatally alienating, tanatographic dimension of photographic ice that freezes time and life, cannot fail to play. But it also works, in the specifics of these images, the confrontation between narcissistic wall and a “Yes” to the flow of life in the inextricable nexus of good and bad, of beautiful and ugly. This dialectic, if one is looking for something worth seeing, is inescapable. One evening, I took Beauty on my lap. And I found it bitter -- wrote Rimbaud in his “Season in Hell.” If one does not find bitterness, in any form of artistic expression, one has found nothing. Only “pretty pictures” or, even more terribly, “pretty pictures.” Almost always, the hegemonic cultural system wants one to look for nothing, wrapped up in the endless chatter of the prêt-à-porter sentences that are sweetly blind. Sometimes, however, bitterness presents itself to us with such insistence that it compels us to see, rains down on us like rain of shots Beyond the Beautiful. Thus, the thing that appears, the Chose freudienne, is tear in the fabric of the reassuring idea of Civilization. Many images go there, toward the perspective point where no one communicates anything to anyone, each alone with their own, often acrobatic, narcissistic isolation. Hugs house emotions that do not look. Glimpses of eyes as beautiful and expressionless as those of angels: Être Ange C'est Étrange , wrote Prevert. Beauty Beyond, consigned to the walls to relaxation to the claustrum.
But Beyond this cold light, fall the veils of that wretched thing that is the pacified and spherical Ego, and of polite and cold two-way relationships. In this direction works the nudity subjected to the “work of the formless,” as the Surrealists called the rupture of well-thought-of representations, and then the gaze catches the body that the mirror or water or a piece of object deforms or completes or blurs, and so many totems enter the dance of the shots: artistic or salvaged artifacts mask-reveal the bodies, make jokes of them, or archetypes, in the small infinite distance between the two effects. And pain appears, dark and closed gaps. And cracks and imperfections show themselves frequently, sometimes as co-protagonists of the scene. Each time the veil is lifted, the pictures seem to tell us, perhaps with the smile of images and antiphrastic titles, that our only possible truth lies in the triumph of the masks we assume, pure semblances without essence, that metaphysical “essence” that is the stuff of fossil philosophers or herbalists.
Essential, if anything, is knowing how close we are to the mollusks and crustaceans that appear in many shots. How much the food offered in refined and aestheticizing arrangements is death feeding life, seductive horror. With little regard for time coming out of the asphyxiated reckoning of history, we know ourselves children of the inorganic, brothers of fish and shellfish, within the cycle, we know not how brief, of life-death. Beyond the Hereafter lies the capacity to gratefully hold up caducous living, and all that allows us to be so.
Here on earth, in our iridescent layers, in the constant oxymoron of joyful weeping, of shared loneliness, lies our Beyond, made of desire in search of its golden objects that give meaning to life. The photos then show, as in a game of metamorphosis of the gaze, their symbolic reverse: having accepted the inescapable otherness of all that surrounds us, the embraces accommodate emotions that do not know ... and love.
Gaps
Even the gaze framed by the dense foliage of trees, or peeking through the web of an octopus's tentacles, can evoke the experience of the Gap, an experience traditionally represented with images of closed doors, walls, something that makes a feared-desired access arduous. Looking closely in the photos in this introductory section, the evocation of the Threshold alternates with that of the Gap. On the Threshold, one waits, fears or hopes, but one does not really seek a gap, except as a dreamed thing. To evoke the Gap is to bring into play the determination to go beyond, to challenge a limit, to force our limits. One can use the aesthetic categories that Ezra Pound elaborated to mark the difference between Lyric and Poetry. The Threshold is Lyric, contemplative and intimate. The Gap is Poetry, which the Greek etymon “poiein” leads back to doing, acting.
Lyric of the Threshold in Waiting for Summer, and in The End of Summer, where a woman moves and lingers before a closed door and a bright wall: thresholds that separate in a before and after natural events that arrive without our contest but that trigger in us a sense of time, regret and hope, what is remembered, what is feared: a Saturday and a Sunday, to recall the threshold effect of Leopard's Saturday.
The photo Fear of Darkness is Poetry of the Gap: romantic poetry of the Gap, with the dramatic light-shadow contrast and with the arms of the human figure outstretched in the effort to cross over to step out into the light, as if in re-enactment of the “Streben,” push and yearn. Photographing is articulation of the two moments. The photographic lens is certainly a threshold, for the eye of the shooter, spying like a curious person through a keyhole, imagines something that leads beyond the frame in which reality is experienced. But the shot is the moment of the Gap, because it enters into a perturbing experience: into a watching oneself being watched. If, in fact, as is a well-established belief, the photographer is a voyeur, he is certainly a voyeur who in turn offers himself to the voyeurism of those who see a kind of mysterious theater of his inner world appear, not in the sense that who knows what occult contents surface (although there is a lush anecdote on the subject) but in the sense that while looking for a subject, an effect, a meaning, or chasing a form, a geometry, the effect of light ... appears the “ghost,” our window of contact with reality, the constant idiolectic blowing within our life choices. What has always been called personal style, not only in art but also in what distinguishes behavior, comes from the breath of the ghost: it surfaces in the ciphered emergence of a minimal detail that is repeated, in the 'insistent use of an effect, in a theme that becomes recurring, in a motif that becomes haunting, in all sorts of expressive tics ... and makes its way, in and out of the innermost zones of our psyche.
Love and the Wall
Walls are everywhere, we live among walls and build them all the time. The wall is the soundtrack of daily looking around us. There is Wall, in relationships between men, especially in relationships between men and women, and in love relationships in general: labyrinthine libraries on incommunicability, and film libraries, and ... the continuous experience of living: acts, words, are returned to us always far from the fullness of understanding (understanding of what, then? as soon as we speak we are taken away from ourselves, we compare(s)ers elsewhere): in every relationship it is therefore not possible to get out of the structures of misunderstanding and alienation. Thick, glass-filled local and historical walls that shout and offend; walls with which we separate ourselves and from which we shoot.
But there is, among our traits of normal insanity, the unlimited will, and the even more boundless poly-media-minded lies, to want us without walls, strong especially when the word "love" is uttered. The thing, (s)seen this way, then becomes that walls are obstacles that the enthusiasm of encounter and the joyful effort of good will can break down and from two we become one, with only one fate, good or bad.
It is quite comical to think that one of the many sources of this myth is pointed to a philosophical origin, namely Plato's Symposium, in the little story of the original hermaphrodite who, split in two by divine punishment, seeks his half with which to be reunited in order to become one again, spherical and perfect. Too bad Plato wanted to entertain with a "comic" thesis, proposed by a comic character-actor on a late wine-soaked evening. So many still believe it, even without wine, but with naiveté equal to the wounds that come when the wall appears instead of the one heart in the hut (if anything, two walls make one alienating hut), and who call love the dustbin of all demands for absolutes born of narcissistic hunger with narcissistic rage following.
What one can do to experience love is to know how to deal with these walls, to know them, to know where they are, and to wait for the happiness of loving to come by taking us from behind, unexpected miracle. You cannot be asked to tear down walls. If anything, within four walls, it is possible to lose oneself in the pleasure of loving, with eyes closed, as long as one can, as long as it lasts.
SurReal
The Real is never grasped with the tongs of Reality, a human construction in perpetual becoming, subject to adjustment, controversy and fierce struggle. When something happens that evades our capacity for interpretation, for symbolic acceptance, we are faced with the Real. One artistic way of expressing this displacement of meaning is the long-standing Surrealism, that of Michelangelo's self-representation in the floppy skin of St. Bartholomew, Bosch's in his Garden of Delights, or Blake's in The Man Who Taught Blake Painting in his Dreams. Then comes historical surrealism and it begins to unleash, in pictorial and literary representations, incongruent elements, challenges of all sorts to the senses and the mind. Now, nearly 100 years after Magritte's "betrayal of images," there is an endemic surrealism running through our culture, very often tragically unaware. But there also remains the pleasure of the surreal gimmick that asks to be free in the proliferation of self-eliding meanings.
In a way, in the specifics of a language fundamentally based on irony, also in this section of "AlDiLà" the plot of a photographic poetics that focuses on "undressing," on a subtle but enveloping praise of bare life, continues. Where the image plays with the freedom of dreams (dreams are not always free), the only meaning is not wanting meaning, welcoming nonsensical wisdom.
And make something of this even beyond the realm of surreal expressions: even the data of reality , even those most filled with truth, carry as a shadow an unthinkable and uninterpretable residue: a little nudity is fine even when we have to dress up.
The Gaze of Narcissus
No medium like photography can render the swift and continuous metamorphosis of human appearance, the processes of transition from pride to despair of our psyche, glass with a thousand veins ready to break upon impact according to lines of flaking. While psychiatrists give precise names to these flaking lines, and search with various psychotherapies for glues to hold the pieces together, photographers exhibit the irreversible waning of the times when the image was supposed to reflect identity values, to define man, to sculpt "in the round" his temperament and his place in the world. In the analysis room the wounds speak, on the pictures one can see the image. Certainly not with the physiognomic pretensions of Lavater's time: rather, what one sees, if anything, is the virtuous-violent movement of those cracks, the wounds that become loopholes to grasp possibilities for development, the nexus linking psychosis and gods that suggests the analytic tradition between Jung and Hillman.
There is a mythology that permeates the photographic work, that of narcissism, which traverses time and space in the celebration of obsessive self-love and the fixing of the virtues of one's identity traits. The myth of Narcissus is the cult version of this.
Contemporary photography cannot but make this a central, almost inescapable theme, between the polarity of the celebration of one's own image and identity, à la Mapplethorpe, to the suffering experience of Nan Goldin who self-reflects in moments of "beauty and pain," to use her own terms, ruthlessly reflecting herself in her own punk, abused, drag queen image. With Cindy Sherman, then, it goes so far as to photographed the caricature massacre of the "rococo" narcissism of contemporary female imagerie: in reversal of the stereotypes of the feminine who wants to escape time and imperfection, she self-portrays herself as a clown, disguised in a thousand bizarre fashions, a silicon mask: Narcissus mirrors himself appalled in the fluff of conventional self-representations.
In AlDiLà, the relationship with mythologema is very complex and personal. Ideally, it is the path from Rebirth and Regret, images that can be interpreted as moments of coming out of the cocoon of the static image, the Olympian silhouette of the Ideal Ego, the iron mask .... to touch the earth with one's hands, among the uncertain reflections of the symbols in which we are immersed and by which we are spoken. The shots oscillate, in calculated disorder, between different valences of the Narcissus gaze, not so much to be seen as developments but as discontinuous emergencies of a hand-to-hand with the Narcissus gaze. Certainly such a gaze often functions as a positive conduit for contact with pleasure: it is "horizontally" removed from demonizations that want life as sacrifice, deprivation, asceticism toward some ascent of redemption. Indeed, quite simply, many shots convey a homage to the light hedonism that is mirrored: these are the smug shots of light moments in life, and some images seem to have escaped from the "horizontal Eden" section to bring it here, Eden, to be mirrored in the mirror or in the water of a swimming pool. More subtle, and linked to profound possibilities of self-reflection, there also appears a real self-portrait narcissism squared: the mirror ripples to irony over the reassuring idea of identity, the complacency of the self-portrait oscillates between overt and covert dimensions, the face is eclipsed, and in the body appears the Sisyphus effort, the twisting in space, the enveloping in a dynamic that reveals the cathartic confrontation with the chilling aspects of myth. Narcissus, laughing or crying, living or dead, true wanted.
Texts by Giancarlo Tonani
![]() | Write |
![]() | Elizabeth Allen CREW Congratulations on this feature, Davide, so well deserved for your inspiring work. I look forward to seeing your future work, and you have my sincere best wishes. |
![]() | Davide Barzaghi CREW Dear Elizabeth… as you know you have always been my precious support…thanks for all your time and attention |
![]() | Eduardo Blanco García PRO Excellent |
by Editor Lourens Durand
Edited and published by Yvette Depaepe, the 28th of May 2025
'Poetry 6816' by Dieter Plogmann
Renaissance art critics developed the theory: ut pictura poesis—as is painting so is poetry—in an attempt to acquire for painting the level of honour that poetry had received as a liberal art since antiquity. Aristotles Poetics and Horace's Ars Poetica serve as the ancient roots from which ut pictura poesis sprung to life during the Renaissance. (1)
So it is an old story.
Many years later, Painter Robert Henri wrote, “Paint the flying spirit of the bird, rather than its feathers.” Similarly, poet Anton Chekhov said,” Don’t tell me the moon is shining, show me the glint of light on broken glass”. Henri added, “one is a plea to painters, another to writers, but both beg the same thing: make me feel something. Don’t just tell me; don’t just show me. Make me feel it. (2)
It is the same in poetry versus photography: poetry requires the poet to see, feel, react, eliciting words – the photographer needs to see, feel, visualise the poem, the colours and pictures and take the photo NOW.
Even if the shot is only a vision, and not possible to shoot immediately, store it in your mind and recreate it later in the studio, or wherever, but don’t lose that original inspiration.
Sure, we know all the rules of composition, light and dark, contrast, unity, balance, value and tone, but we need to listen to the poetic verse that the visualisation has given us and take the shot before the picture fades.
Let’s make a new quotation:
“Ut pictura poesis, sic photographia” (as is painting, so is poetry, so is photography).
Please enjoy the following works by 1X.com photographers which have, in my opinion, captured this concept.
'Poetry' by Dasha_and_Mari
'Poetry of a young woman' by Tina Signesdottir
'Poetry wriiten in Chaos' by Raffi Bashlian
'Poetry of tears' by Ivana Todorovic
'childhood dreams' by Enez-Eusa
'Fairytale' by Siegart
'distant' by Andrew Wixson
'le sol penché...' by Sylvain Devlichevitch
'la lumière...' by Sylvain Devlichevitch
'Broken Wings' by Annie Mitova
'Poetry of an old cemetery' by Fernand Hick
'Poetry' by cccbvdsdf
'Poetry of landscape' by Leszek Paradowski
'Poetry in petals........' by Moo Moodle
'Mysterious, orange, foggy Mastforest' by Saskia Dingemans
'Red-crowned Cranes' by Hua Zhu
'Summer wanderer' by Jaeyoun Ryu
'One Summer Night' by Shenshen Dou
'Happy solitude' by Georgios Bero
'Poem' by Filipe Correa
'blackcity's whitekid' by Miguel
'O wind' by Shenshen Dou
'Sweet' by Shihya Kowatari
'Some Mornings...' by Robert Fabrowski
References
(1)Shannon O'Donoghue THE UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL FLORIDAUNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH JOURNAL 2005
(2) David du Chemin Are Your Photographs Poetic? Part One. November 22, 2020
![]() |
![]() | Subhajit Das PRO Great Photos. Interesting article. Very inspiring. |
![]() |
A spectacular photographic wonder. Congratulations. |
![]() | Eiji Yamamoto PRO Thank you so much for the wonderful article with beautiful and great photos! Very inspiring! |
![]() | Steven Fudge PRO Excellent work by all and great inspiration can be drawn . |
![]() | Jian Xu PRO What a wonderful series of beautiful and inspirational images! |
![]() | Shenshen Dou PRO Thanks Yvette and Lourens for this inspirational article! Really enjoy all beautiful works in the article. To express myself poetically in photography is a dream and a goal , it's still long but fun journey to reach that. |
![]() | Sunil Kulkarni PRO Excellent captures very motivating love it - keep up the great work. |
![]() | Cristiano Giani PRO Splendid and inspirational gallery. Many thanks for sharing.... |
![]() | DonnaHom PRO What an enjoyable collection! |
![]() | Saskia Dingemans PRO Thanks so much for choosing my picture ,dear Laurens and for the beautiful selection of amazing photo's , many thanks Yvette for publishing and all the effort you always make for the 1x gallery . Congrats to all the photographers . Cheers !!! |
![]() | Miro Susta CREW Many thanks for interesting article and for selection of beautiful photographs Lourens, many thanks Yvette for publishing and congratulations to all photo autors for excellent work. |
![]() | Yvette Depaepe CREW Fine article and magificent collection of images, Lourens. Thanks, my friend. And congratulations to all the selected authors. Cheers, Yvette |
by Yvette Depaepe
Published the 26th of May 2025
To Masaki Yazaki, photography used to be a hobby, but it has now become an irreplaceable part of his life. Ever since he started viewing it as a work of art, he spend most of his days thinking about photography-related things. He enjoys expressing himself through photography. He quotes : 'I am strongly attracted to huge structures and small, distinctive buildings — works of art that showcase a variety of techniques. I also find objects with regularity, such as continuous straight and curved lines, beautiful.'
Enjoy this interview and discover more about the artist behind these images.
'Jagged buildings'
Dear friend, first I would like to thank you so much for taking the time to answer this questionnaire!
To begin, please introduce yourself shortly and tell us more about you, your hobbies or other projects you are involved in!
Thank you very much for inviting me to this interview.
I live in Saitama, Japan. I have a son.
These days, my hobbies are photography, visiting museums, going for drives and doing outdoor activities such as camping. These activities not only relax me, but also inspire my photography.
When and how did you start your photographic journey?
I bought my first camera six years ago, when my son was born. I used it to document my children's development. Initially, I took photos of my family and everyday scenes with no particular intention of creating works of art. However, I wanted to develop more impressive and beautiful images, so I joined the 1X community to learn how to do this. Here, the the photographers can act as judges and rate the photos. I saw the very high quality of the work posted on this site and became interested in taking photos as works of art. I think it was about a year ago that I started my photography journey in earnest.
For many of us, photography is either a hobby or a way of life. How would you describe your relationship with photography?
For me, photography used to be a hobby, but it has now become an irreplaceable part of my life.
Ever since I started viewing it as a work of art, I spend most of my day thinking about photography-related things. This includes everything from the moment I wake up in the morning, during my commute to work, while I'm at work, and when I get home. I enjoy expressing myself through photography.
Which experience has had the greatest influence on your journey in photography so far?
After joining the photography community, I mainly took street snapshots and photos of flowers for a while, but I couldn't define a clear genre that I liked. Then one day, I came across a minimalist photo on Instagram that had artistically cut out parts of everyday buildings, such as supermarkets, petrol stations and amusement parks. I was shocked! I knew I wanted to take photos like that!
Why are you so captivated by architectural photography?
I am strongly attracted to huge structures and small, distinctive buildings — works of art that showcase a variety of techniques. I find it hard to believe that such creations could have been made by people like me. I also find objects with regularity, such as continuous straight and curved lines, beautiful.
Which is more important to you: the mood or story behind your images, or technical perfection?
While both are important, technology is merely a means of conveying a worldview. For me, it's more about the worldview that the painting conveys.
Do you carefully prepare the locations where you intend to take photographs?
Sometimes I check out the area around the planned location beforehand using Street View, for example. Generally, though, I walk around without a destination in mind, often looking for unexpected encounters. I'm very happy when I find an interesting building or a good photo opportunity. It's like a treasure hunt!
Describe your overall photographic vision.
Due to work and family commitments, I have not had much opportunity to travel, so I have often photographed in my neighbourhood. However, I have realised that ordinary buildings can look like art depending on how they are framed, and that there are also interestingly shaped buildings nearby that have simply gone unnoticed.
Recently, I have started taking street snapshots and urban landscapes to broaden my range of expression. However, my underlying vision is to use my camera to capture 'artistic scenes hidden in ordinary towns, neither rural nor urban'.
Can you tell us more about your creative process, from initial idea to final product?
I walk around the city, looking for interesting subjects to photograph in RAW. I make colour, exposure and distortion adjustments in Capture One, and then I remove dust and make final adjustments in Photoshop.
Where do you look for inspiration, and what inspires you most?
I often find inspiration in paintings in museums, as well as in architecture and art magazines.
Many people believe that gear is not very important when you are passionate about photography.
However, could you please tell us what equipment you use (camera, lenses, lighting, tripod, etc.)?
I mostly use the Nikon Z7II with the Z 24-120mm f/4 lens for my work. The camera has a high pixel count, which is ideal for architectural photography, and it is lightweight and easy to handle. The lens has a wide range of focal lengths and excellent resolution, which I like. I also often use the Nikon Zf, the Z 70–200 mm f/2.8 and the LAOWA 15 mm f/2.
Which photo is your favourite? Please tell us the story behind your choice.
'My favorite colors'
This photo was taken at a rubbish tip near my home, where I found a trolley that had been left there for disposal. One of the themes in my photography is finding beautiful colours and artistic elements in places that people don't usually pay attention to. I think this photo captures that idea well.
Which photographers or mentors have influenced you and your photography, and who are your favourites?
I must admit that I don't know many photographers, nor do I know much about them. However, of the famous photographers I know, I am particularly inspired by the work of Saul Leiter. I find his bold compositions and skilful use of colour very inspiring.
Now that we're almost at the end of this interview, could you please tell us about any photographic projects you'd like to be involved in?
Personally, I would like to continue improving my photography and actively participate in international competitions.
I also dream of participating in a group exhibition or holding a solo exhibition showcasing a curated selection of my photographs.
Is there anything else you would like to add, and what are your thoughts on using 1x as a home base for your work?
The 1x gallery is full of work of a very high standard, which I find inspiring and educational.
I am also motivated by the fair scoring system and the huge level of difficulty that I consider as essential.
'Red roof'
'Tri colors'
'Blue and white'
'Geometry pattern'
'Wave'
'Four Hole Wall'
'The ultimage weapen'
'Pale color wall'
'Blue and Yellow'
'Tricolor'
'Part of outer wall'
'Green and the sky'
'Thunderbolt'
'Pink face'
'Triangle'
'Red hole'
'Brick wall'
'Green wall'
'Green and Yellow'
'Ball cane'
'Colourful blocks'
![]() |
![]() | Cristiano Giani PRO Very very nice . Congrats !!... |
![]() | Masaki Yazaki PRO Thank you so much! |
![]() | Gila Koller PRO what an amazing minimalistic work, wonderful photos Masaki!! Congrats!!
Thank you Yevette for the lovely article. |
![]() | Masaki Yazaki PRO Thank you so much! |
![]() | Zhifei Chen PRO 非常具有个人风格的艺术作品,非常棒 |
![]() | Masaki Yazaki PRO Thank you so much! |
![]() | Sean Huang PRO I'm particularly drawn to the bold colors and geometric elegance in these photographs. Amazing works! Congratulations |
![]() | Masaki Yazaki PRO I am very honoured to hear you say that! Thank you very much! |
![]() | Hadi Malijani PRO Absolutely amazing and fantastic work dear friend congratulations |
![]() | Masaki Yazaki PRO Thank you so much! |
![]() | Anita Singh PRO Extremely beautiful artistic work , like the colour tones so much which are vibrant pastel’s. Congratulations for the wonderful article, it was a joy going through it thanks Yvette for showing us the great work of accomplished photographers. |
![]() | Masaki Yazaki PRO I am very honoured to hear you say that! Thank you very much! |
![]() | I am enchanted by the images of this author, supported by his minimalism and the use of color he makes. Welcome to the author for his work and the interviewer. Thanks for sharing |
![]() | Masaki Yazaki PRO Thank you for your kind words! |
![]() | Les Forrester PRO Beautiful work everyone of them, it was an enjoyable article, thank you for sharing with us |
![]() | Masaki Yazaki PRO Thank you so much! |
![]() | Wayne Pearson PRO Excellent minamilist work, and great article as usual Yvette, thank you both! |
![]() | Masaki Yazaki PRO Thank you for your kind words! |
![]() | 大山 儀高 PRO ユニークな構図と美しい色合いで見るものを魅了する美しい作品ですね。おめでとうございます! |
![]() | Masaki Yazaki PRO ありがとうございます!
お褒めいただきとても嬉しいです! |
![]() | Rainer Neumann PRO excellent images and article |
![]() | Masaki Yazaki PRO Thank you so much! |
![]() | Great images, love your inspiring work! Congrats |
![]() | Masaki Yazaki PRO Thank you so much! |
![]() | Marwa Elchazly PRO Amazing composition and color theme, very inspiring |
![]() | Masaki Yazaki PRO Thank you so much! |
![]() | Eiji Yamamoto PRO Thank you so much for this interesting interview with great photos from a unique perspective! Congratulations! |
![]() | Masaki Yazaki PRO Thank you so much! |
![]() | Jian Xu PRO Very beautiful gallery and inspiring story! |
![]() | Masaki Yazaki PRO Thank you so much! |
![]() | penpen PRO Oh, my friend!
That's just like you, totally awesome!
|
![]() | Masaki Yazaki PRO I'm glad you admire me, PenPen!
Thank you! |
![]() | penpen PRO Oh, my friend!
That's just like you, killing it! |
![]() | Love your pictures mate! |
![]() | Masaki Yazaki PRO I'm very happy to hear you say that!
Thank you! |
![]() | This article is amazing!!! |
![]() | Masaki Yazaki PRO Glad to! Thank you! |
![]() | Arnon Orbach CREW Beautiful graphics gallery, love the interplay between shapes and colors that produce great frames. My warmest compliments dear Masaki and thanks to Yvette for the introducing you to us all. |
![]() | Masaki Yazaki PRO Thank you!
I am very honoured! |
By Editor Miro Susta
Edited and published by Yvette Depaepe, the 23rd of May 2025
Although the terms “Shallow Depth of Field” and “Soft Focus” are closely related in photography, they have different meanings and applications.
'Beauty giving you 'goose' bumps' by Yvette Depaepe
In this article, I took the liberty of referring to shallow depth of field as 'blurring' and soft focus as 'softening'.
untitled by David Minster
Blurring is a form of intentional image processing that aims to achieve a soft-focus effect, whereas softening is an artistic technique used to create a special soft image.
'Window side' by Takashi Tadano
Blurring is a powerful technique suitable for striking portraits and almost any other photographic genre. It is also very popular in macro photography, still life photography, wildlife photography and many kinds of travel photography.
untitled by Doron Braunstein
'Dandelion' by Margareth Perfoncio
'The blue forest ….........' by Piet Haaksma
Photographing with a shallow depth of field is a simplification technique in which unnecessary details are blurred or removed, and the focal plane is limited to the essentials.
'Warm up' by Rana Jabeen
However, many photographers find it difficult to get started with shallow depth of field photography. One issue is that people don't usually experiment with fast enough lenses.
'In the woods' by Shenshen Dou
If you are using a camera with a 'kit lens', it is likely that the maximum aperture will be f/4.5 or smaller. This will not produce a shallow depth of field, but will only result in a soft foreground. Not much can be achieved with such a lens. In general, lenses with an aperture of f/2.8 or faster should be used, but f/2.8 only provides the expected creative effect in certain situations.
Therefore, it is necessary to invest a little more and use faster, high-quality prime lenses.
'The bursting spores of Cookeina Tricholoma mushroom' by Sharita Miranda
The 50 mm prime lens is a good starting point for shallow depth of field photography and is ideal for street, still life and portrait photography.
'Red Leaves' by Leif Løndal
Using long lenses (85–100 mm) can flatten a scene and compress the distances between elements, making it more difficult to include context in the frame.
'Sentiment' by Patryk Morzonek
Taking the camera out into the streets with an 85 mm or longer lens will produce similar shots as there is not much room for movement, space or composition. Images would be tightly framed, showing mostly people's heads and little else.
untitled by Vagueandoporlisboa
Using a 50 mm lens, you can get much closer to your subject and vary the amount of context you include, while still achieving a strong shallow depth of field that makes the subject stand out from its surroundings.
'Help Punk to get drunk' by Joško Šimic
However, it is not only 50 mm or longer prime lenses that are best suited to photography with a shallow depth of field. One of the most important lenses for this type of photography is the 24 mm lens. While not ultra-wide, 24 mm is a generous focal length for a wide-angle lens, and an aperture of f/1.4 or even f/1.2 is powerful for achieving a shallow depth of field.
'Fisherman's Wharf at Sunset' by chen wei
The further away the subject of a photograph is, the less effect a large aperture has. Compositions with a close subject appear more dramatic due to the relative distance, although the effective depth of field is much shallower.
'Boys and cow' by Svetlin Yosifov
David Hamilton became famous in the 1970s and 1980s for his soft-focus photographs. Other photographers often imitated this softening effect, and it eventually became overused. Even today, photos with soft focus are not necessarily considered superior when the soft-focus effect is applied.
'Royal Tea. Pearls' by Dasha_and_Mari
Major features of soft-focus technique: -
· Creates a dreamy aesthetic.
· Hides imperfections.
· Makes skin look smooth.
· Gives the image a nostalgic feel.
'Potatoes' by Bill Gekas
Photographing with soft focus is an art form that involves simplifying an image by removing unnecessary details and limiting the plane of focus to the essentials.
'Family flamingos' by Natalia
There are many ways to achieve soft focus in images, the most common methods are listed below:
· Soft focus lens, expensive but gives the best results.
· Soft focus filters which scatter light to create the effect of soft focus
· UV filter smeared with a minimal amount of Vaseline.
· Post processing does not give a perfect soft focus but still gives an acceptable result.
'Time to seed … ' by Yvette Depaepe
In conclusion it can be said that: -
· Soft focus is a technique used in photography to reduce the contrast of delicate details in a picture.
· Soft focus is a blur caused by spherical aberration or, in other words, light scattering. This means getting a blurred image without losing sharpness.
· Soft focus softens the contrasts. Depending on the effect and technique, an image may appear softer, foggier, or duller.
· Originally, soft focus effects may have been considered a lens fault or a technical defect in the lens.
· Although the soft focus can be edited in post-processing, the result of a shot with a soft-focus lens cannot be achieved.
Following just a few more wonderful images from our members on this subject.
'Pulsatilla vulgaris' by Piet Haaksma
'Autumn Colors' by Gustav Davidsson
'in the park' by Teruhiko Tsuchida
'Airport winter works' by Miro Susta
'LostGirl' by Marcel Egger
'Cycle of Life' by Delphine Devos
'Calamity's daughter' by Cath Schneider
'Red' by Sebastien Blomme
'the cellist' by Roswitha Schleicher-Schwarz
'Haller fantasy' by Wil Mijer
www.mrsphoto.net
[email protected]
![]() |
![]() | Anita Singh PRO Beautiful frames, each photograph is a masterpiece in itself. Thanks Miro for the wonderful article. Congratulations to everyone whose work is showcased
|
![]() | Miro Susta CREW Thank you very much for your lovely comment dear Anita. |
![]() | Congratulations and thank you for your wonderful exposition |
![]() | Miro Susta CREW You're most welcome Jorge, many thanks for your praise. |
![]() | Great work |
![]() | Miro Susta CREW Many thanks Gianpiero |
![]() | Rana Jabeen PRO Beautiful photos to explain the interesting topic, superb article dear Miro...happyto see one of my photos included...
.thank you for sharing with us Yvette :) |
![]() | Miro Susta CREW Thank you very much for your wonderful words of encouragement dear Rana |
![]() | Jolanda Pikkaart PRO Great article
|
![]() | Subhajit Das PRO Great images. Informative article, Very inspiring. Congratulations! |
![]() | Miro Susta CREW Thank you very much dear Subhajit I'm glad to see that you like it |
![]() | Cicek Kiral CREW A really informative article that will be very helpful for lots of photographers. Thanks a lot dear Miro and Yvette... |
![]() | Miro Susta CREW Dear Cicek many thanks for your nice words of praise, we are happy to see that you like it |
![]() | Eiji Yamamoto PRO Thank you so much for a wonderful and beneficial article with great photos! Very inspiring! |
![]() | Miro Susta CREW Dear Eiji I appreciate your lovely words of encouragement very much, nice to see that you like it |
![]() | Molly Fu PRO Beautiful collections, thanks for the detailed knowledge in the article, very helpful. |
![]() | Miro Susta CREW Many thanks for your nice words of praise dear Molly |
![]() | Shenshen Dou PRO Interesting article and guidacing points for improving skills, and with the beautifully selected images! Thanks Yvette and Miro! |
![]() | Miro Susta CREW Thank you very much for your nice words of encouragement Shenshen |
![]() | Tremendo trabajo, enhorabuena! |
![]() | Miro Susta CREW Muchas gracias Carlos |
![]() | Pang Teng Lin PRO Beautiful work. Congratulations |
![]() | Miro Susta CREW Many thanks Pang Teng |
![]() | Bole Kuljic PRO Beautiful lesson and explanation, write up and choice of photographs. Thank you very much. |
![]() | Miro Susta CREW You are most welcome Bole, thank you very much for your positive comment to our article |
by Yvette Depaepe
Published the 21st of May 2025
'Staircase Photography'
Using a staircase as a photographic background or as its main topic will lead to an unexpected result. It will shine bright like sunlight or fade like sunset, add a tremendous contrast between the surrounding elements, or emphasize a detail of the favorite part of the location.
Staircases are Art works and always have a little mystery effect.
The staircase photographs submitted also are Art Works. See by your self ;-)
The winners with the most votes are:
1st place : Louie Luo
2nd place : Rolf Endermann
3rd place : Molly Fu
Congratulations to the winners and honourable mentions and thanks to all the participants in the contest 'Staircase Photography'
The currently running theme is 'Mystery in photography'
Mystery invites the viewer to explore the unknown and engage with the image in a deeper way. It’s about leaving space for imagination and often presents a sense of suspense, ambiguity, or curiosity.
This contest will end on Sunday the 1st of June at midnight.
The sooner you upload your submission the more chance you have to gather the most votes.
If you haven't uploaded your photo yet, click here.
Good luck to all the participants.
1st place by Louie Luo
![]() |
![]() | DonnaHom PRO Very enjoyable collection. Thank you |
![]() | Wei Yu PRO Congratulations to all winners. Great work! |
![]() | Miro Susta CREW Wonderful photos, congratulations to all authors. |
![]() | Yanyan Gong PRO Outstanding work! Congratulations to all the winners! |
![]() | Great work |
![]() | Enhorabuena a todos!! gramdisimo trabajo |
![]() | Larry Deng PRO Congrtas to all the winners +++ |
![]() | Xiaomei li PRO Congratulations to all winners. Great work. |
![]() | Subhajit Das PRO Congratulations to all winners. Great work. |
![]() | Anita Singh PRO Beautiful images , congratulations to all winners |
![]() | Pang Teng Lin PRO Congratulations to all winners |