| Image |
Comment |
| 02/24/2026 10:34:59 PM |
yawnby kichuComment by nam: Dizzying - in the best way. Especially if you like cats :) |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/24/2026 10:34:35 PM |
byeby kichuComment by mariuca: I first thought that I saw this bird before, still running like a busy mother hen, impossible to be captured in one shot. A clip of a flip book which create the illusion of animation when flipped rapidly. I like the sepia tone as if in the frantic movement of the bird the dust got into our eyes. |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/24/2026 09:27:33 PM |
byeby kichuComment by Melethia: First of all – pigeon! I adore photographs of pigeons. It’s a thing – can’t really explain it. Not just any pigeon, though - this one is most definitely on a mission and can’t be bothered to stay in the frame. To me, it’s a lovely, light-hearted snippet of life. I really like how the processing lends itself to the “je ne sais quoi” feel of this, too. ‘Tis a great example of how an “out-of-balance” photograph can be perfectly balanced after all. |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/24/2026 09:10:19 PM |
byeby kichuComment by kanaj: Congratulations on being named a jury selection in the Art of 2025 challenge!
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/24/2026 08:33:12 PM |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/24/2026 08:32:04 PM |
byeby kichuComment by kanaj: I truly love this image. Never mind the base aesthetics which appeal to me—the use of grainy, lo-fi processing that hints at an era of "found" moments and casually grabbed exposures that are accidentally profound. Let's talk instead about the way that even if this was 100% an accidental exposure—which it honestly could have been—its curation and digitally realized presentation demonstrate the artist's attunement to things which the casual eye might otherwise ignore if the bird's face and body were in perfect rule-of-thirds composition within the frame. What I see here is an invitation to contemplate the story that precedes this moment. The negative space is a blank canvas on which I'm allowed to project my own idea of what came in the moments before the shutter exposed this scene—and to imagine the possibilities of what is happening outside the frame to provoke the sudden flight. Above and beyond all of that, I find in this composition an interrogation of the conventions that define what makes an image "pretty" and a gentle suggestion that perhaps the backside of a pigeon is equally as worthy of consideration as its frontside. |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/24/2026 06:56:46 PM |
byeby kichuComment by KristjanUnnar: Tremendously funny photograph. Makes me think of Henri Cartier-Bresson cursing his camera for being too slow. The cropping decision has transformed this from being something completely mundane into something that provokes feeling. |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/24/2026 05:00:47 PM |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/23/2026 07:03:39 AM |
byeby kichuComment by kichu: Originally posted by tate: It's just pixels, but it's doing all the right things.
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haha that's a good way of putting how I thought about it, perfect :P
thanks for the award! :) |
| 02/23/2026 07:03:06 AM |
byeby kichuComment by kichu: Originally posted by posthumous: cheeky title but I do like the egregious inkiness of this smudgefest.
I'm hanging this in my fantasy gallery |
thanks so much! my first, I think :) |
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