Claire Rosen

instagram.com
Claire Rosen is one of the top influencer with 6363 audience and 7.94% engagement rate on Instagram. Check out the full profile and start to collaborate.
Аудитория
6,363
Уровень Вовлеченности
7.94%
Аккаунты Канала

Лента

I have some exciting news, I am working on a Fine Art book of this series Birds of a Feather (which will include my other series of Birds of Prey and Ducks in a Row). I am hoping to make a few new images before we dive into the design.  If you have any bird models in the PA, NJ, NY, DE area that would be interested in participating please get in touch with a photo, your general location, and availability in the month of May.  Thanks very much in advance for your support.
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
Rose Breasted Cockatoo No. 7461

I have some exciting news, I am working on a Fine Art book of thi Read More

What’s a moment of magical impossibility that you’d like to stumble upon today?
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
Magic made for @fujifilmx_us using their #XT-4 and #50mm1 #myfujifilmlegacy #fujifilmcreator 
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
Thank you very much to @majidalsayegh, his beautiful Samara, and to my very patient unicorn whisperer sister Lillie who dons armor with no complaint and wakes up at 4 am to drive an hour to make sunrise photos with unicorns... Horn carved by @sunleafgardens and post production by @thepostoffice_nyc 

#unicornsarereal #unicorn #unicornsofinstagram #imaginarium #ClaireRosen, #ClairRosen, #Artist, #ArtistsofInstagram, #Photographer, #Photography, #FineArt, #FineArtPhotography, #FineArtPhotographer, #ArtPhotography, #ConceptualPhotography, #ContemporaryPhotography, #ContemporaryArt #FemaleArtist, #WomenArtists, #WomenArtistsofInstagram,

What’s a moment of magical impossibility that you’d like to s Read More

The serpent slithers through the human imagination, appearing in creation lore across every culture and continent; it is one of the oldest and most universal creatures in mythology.  A powerful symbol of rebirth, transformation, immortality, and healing, these potent creatures represent the dual expression of good and evil.  Layered throughout these graphic images of serpents on classic patterned wallpaper are representations of both the natural and unnatural; abstracts of the tension between humanity and nature.  Snakes elicit strong responses as viewers will either be drawn to their hypnotic shapes or recoil in fear. 

This new serpent set was created during quarantine - check out the whole series on my website (link in bio) Thank you to @westisbest788 for the snakes and @sunleafgardens and @tatreau_ for the snake handling.  Thank you @fujifilmx_us for the camera ?!

The serpent slithers through the human imagination, appearing in Read More

Corn Snakes & Toads.  Flowers from local farm @pasturesongfarm 

#Stilllife #cornsnake #toads #conservation #stilllifephotography, #naturemorte, #floralstilllife #ClaireRosen #myfujifilmlegacy

Corn Snakes & Toads. Flowers from local farm @pasturesongfarm Read More

Sweet Fennel ?

Sweet Fennel ?

A longing look out rainy window,

A longing look out rainy window, "Calf at Window" is a living sti Read More

Floral Still Life No. 1114 welcoming spring...
The realities of our world have made the core message embedded in the still life more relevant than ever. This series of still life imagery, follows in the footsteps of the masters of the #Baroqueperiod, harnessing the #symbolism of objects to illustrate the fleeting quality of time and the transience of life. Viewers are invited to meditate on the dignity, beauty, and purpose in each object, all of which evoke one essential point. This too shall pass. The still life captures what is constant in the natural world, including the inevitable truth of our impermanence. The images in our virtual lives reflect the cult of ‘the moment’ – where sensory pleasures are captured, elevated, and shared at a dizzying rate. This onslaught can cause us to conflate ubiquity with importance, as we share in the cult of the fleeting that has made its house of worship on social media networks. 

This work is on view @fotorelevance through April.

Floral Still Life No. 1114 welcoming spring... The realities of o Read More

Inspiration for
Inspiration for
Inspiration for
Inspiration for

Inspiration for "Table no. 1015" ‘Still Life with Cheese’, by Read More

“After Severine Roesen Still Life No. 0305” this work is on view @fotorelevance 
Historically, the still life initially began as an exercise in reproductive skill, where artists created faithful renditions of their subject. From there, artists incorporated symbols and messages into the work, using depictions of luxury commodities outside the grasp of most as moral messages and reminders of the brevity of life. These depictions were seen as academic exercises, and were not hung in dining rooms as mere images of exquisite food or flowers, they were hung in libraries to inspire thoughtful conversation. 
Dutch #floralstilllife are crafted to look like realistic bouquets, but in fact, blooms included in a single bouquet were intentionally selected because it would have been impossible to find the composition in nature. The flowers could not have bloomed at the same time under natural conditions. The impossible constructions implied that nature was subservient to man, an idea that remained the dominant way of thinking until the Renaissance, and still haunts society to this day. 
The boundaries between art and science in the early modern era were fluid. The #stilllife genre and cabinets of curiosity alike reflected the intersection between nature and art. Women were particularly drawn to the developing field of the natural sciences as an arena for visual exploration and representation.  Discoveries of insects were accelerated by the flow of exotic plants and animals into Europe from other countries; and many of the images were meant to represent a microcosm of ecosystems, with both its flora and fauna. With today's rapid decline of insect populations and loss of both plant and animal biodiversity, the still life with its references to complete ecosystems has an added message about our climate and the critical work of #conservation. #stilllifephotography, #naturemorte, #floralstilllife #ClaireRosen

“After Severine Roesen Still Life No. 0305” this work is on v Read More

×