Artwork description:

From an ongoing project titled 'Polarised Soul', 'The Tapestry Chair 1' is a multiple exposure shot in 2015 with a vintage Polaroid Image Elite (also known as a Spectra) camera, using expired PZ600 Silver Shade film by The Impossible Project. This is not a digitally manipulated image...the effect was created entirely on the film, in the camera.

From time to time I release small editions of photographs from another, very personal, strand of my work. This strand incorporates themes of sensuality and sexuality, intimacy and objectification, voyeurism and fetishism, fluid moralities and new paradigms. The images are deliberately lo-fi, raw and visceral. Often darkly conceptual, sometimes darkly erotic. These images deal in the convergence, divergence and intersection of perception and reality, with an uncompromising aesthetic and a blurring of lines between intimacy and detachment.

The edition size is 7. Printed on gallery-quality fine art paper. Signed and numbered on the front in the border, and coming with a certificate of authenticity.

Sold unmounted/unframed. Please get in touch if you wish to discuss mounting and framing options.

Also available as a 20x16 inch print from an edition of 10, and a 40x32 inch print from an edition of 3. Please contact me for pricing and availability of these.

Materials used:

Gallery-quality archival fine art photographic paper

Tags:
#instant film #portrait #woman #black and white #nude #girl #monochrome #model #chair #double exposure #multiple exposure #polaroid #film photography #conceptual photography 
Featured by our Editors:

The Tapestry Chair 1 - 1/7 - 30x24in Unmounted (2015) Photograph
by Justice Hyde

Star fullStar fullStar fullStar fullStar full 13 Artist Reviews

£395

  • Photograph on Paper
  • From a limited edition of 7
  • Size: 86.36 x 71.12 x 0.25cm (unframed) / 76.2 x 60.96cm (actual image size)
  • Signed and numbered certificate of authenticity
  • Style: Surrealistic
  • Subject: People and portraits

Loading

Artwork description
Minus

From an ongoing project titled 'Polarised Soul', 'The Tapestry Chair 1' is a multiple exposure shot in 2015 with a vintage Polaroid Image Elite (also known as a Spectra) camera, using expired PZ600 Silver Shade film by The Impossible Project. This is not a digitally manipulated image...the effect was created entirely on the film, in the camera.

From time to time I release small editions of photographs from another, very personal, strand of my work. This strand incorporates themes of sensuality and sexuality, intimacy and objectification, voyeurism and fetishism, fluid moralities and new paradigms. The images are deliberately lo-fi, raw and visceral. Often darkly conceptual, sometimes darkly erotic. These images deal in the convergence, divergence and intersection of perception and reality, with an uncompromising aesthetic and a blurring of lines between intimacy and detachment.

The edition size is 7. Printed on gallery-quality fine art paper. Signed and numbered on the front in the border, and coming with a certificate of authenticity.

Sold unmounted/unframed. Please get in touch if you wish to discuss mounting and framing options.

Also available as a 20x16 inch print from an edition of 10, and a 40x32 inch print from an edition of 3. Please contact me for pricing and availability of these.

Materials used:

Gallery-quality archival fine art photographic paper

Tags:
#instant film #portrait #woman #black and white #nude #girl #monochrome #model #chair #double exposure #multiple exposure #polaroid #film photography #conceptual photography 
Featured by our Editors:
14 day money back guaranteeFree returns

14 day money back guaranteeLearn more

5.0

Overall Rating

Based on 13 reviews
5 stars
13
4 stars
0
3 stars
0
2 stars
0
1 stars
0

Visit Justice Hyde shop

Justice Hyde

Star fullStar fullStar fullStar fullStar full (13)

Location United Kingdom

About
Justice Hyde is a photographic artist based in North West England. Largely self-taught, his work incorporates multiple strands: explorations of mortality through abstracted images of deteriorated surfaces both natural and... Read more

View all