Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 5

Lauren Chin
"Spirit of Ectasy" Photography 25" x 18" inch Edition 1/7 by Lauren Chin

2023

About the Item

"Spirit of Ectasy" Photography 25" x 18" inch Edition 1/7 by Lauren Chin Comes in glass frame Lauren Chin, a photographer and creative director based in Los Angeles focuses her visual communications on capturing raw emotions and energy expressed through human movement. Mainly shooting individuals as her subjects, she purposely distorts facial identity by manipulating her camera settings. Lauren’s art is dedicated to evoking emotions that arise from looking at an image involving individuals in an abstract form of light. While capturing people’s true form in a different essence Lauren creates with a very distinct camera solely dedicated to recording only monochromatic imagery. She brings a strong passion for light, composition, and movement to create extraordinary visuals. Lauren deconstructs each photo defining an aspect of being allured by something that is obscure.
  • Creator:
    Lauren Chin (American)
  • Creation Year:
    2023
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 25 in (63.5 cm)Width: 18 in (45.72 cm)Depth: 1 in (2.54 cm)
  • Medium:
  • Movement & Style:
  • Period:
  • Condition:
  • Gallery Location:
    Culver City, CA
  • Reference Number:
    1stDibs: LU1085113185462
More From This SellerView All
  • "Wrapped Series Untitled #5" Photography 1/10 42" x 28" inch by Robert Mack
    By Robert Mack
    Located in Culver City, CA
    "Wrapped Series Untitled #5" Photography 1/10 42" x 28" inch by Robert Mack 2013 Photograph, archival exhibition paper Aluminum mount, UV mat protection Edition 1 of 10 + 2AP ...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Metal

  • "Wrapped Series Untitled #6" Photography 1/10 32" x 23" inch by Robert Mack
    By Robert Mack
    Located in Culver City, CA
    "Wrapped Series Untitled #6" Photography 1/10 32" x 23" inch by Robert Mack 2013 Photograph, archival exhibition paper Aluminum mount, UV mat protection Edition 1 of 10 + 2AP ...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Metal

  • Untitled (Nr. 1002) Photography 36" x 44" Edition 1/12 by Ben Cope & Rowan Daly
    By Rowan Daly
    Located in Culver City, CA
    Untitled (Nr. 1002) Photography 36" x 44" Edition 1/12 by Ben Cope & Rowan Daly Unframed - ships rolled in a tube Ben Cope + Rowan Daly Off the Grid Off the Grid is the culminat...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Archival Pigment

  • Untitled (Nr. 0382) Photography 18" x 24" Edition of 24 by Ben Cope & Rowan Daly
    By Ben Cope
    Located in Culver City, CA
    Untitled (Nr. 0382) Photography 18" x 24" Edition of 24 by Ben Cope & Rowan Daly Unframed - ships rolled in a tube Ben Cope + Rowan Daly Off the Grid Off the Grid is the culmina...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Portrait Photography

    Materials

    Archival Pigment

  • Untitled (Nr. 1035) Photography 18" x 24" Edition of 24 by Ben Cope & Rowan Daly
    By Rowan Daly
    Located in Culver City, CA
    Untitled (Nr. 1035) Photography 18" x 24" Edition of 24 by Ben Cope & Rowan Daly Unframed - ships rolled in a tube Ben Cope + Rowan Daly Off the Grid Off the Grid is the culmina...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Archival Pigment

  • "Star Boy" Fine Art Photography 24" x 18" in Ed. 2/24 by Viktorija Pashuta
    By Viktorija Pashuta
    Located in Culver City, CA
    "Star Boy" Fine Art Photography 24" x 18" in Ed. 2/24 by Viktorija Pashuta 2016 Ready to hang Latvian born Viktorija Pashuta is internationally published and award winning fashion and art photographer gaining momentum and notoriety in Southern California. With visual cues rooted in dance and music, and fashion passion stemming from her European upbringing, her images are sensual, sultry, yet powerful. Viktorija’s work is known for so called ‘color therapy’ – where she uses saturated and vibrant colors to achieve the effect of fashion surrealism. Her images are very feminine and empowering at the same time to celebrate the essence of a woman. Her work has been published in such magazines as RUNWAY (USA), GQ, Esquire, VISION (China), Prestige International (France), Essence (USA), Estetica (USA), Nylon Guys, Vogue (Italia), Tchad (Canada), Fashizblack (France), Highlights (UK), CULTURE (Australia), shooting celebrity covers for Healthy Living Magazine, Runway, Orlando Style, Justine and more. Her celebrity work includes Paris Hilton, Kathy Griffin, Lance Bass, Taryn Manning, Bella Thorne, Kelly Price, Keke Palmer, Rochelle Aytes, James Goldstein...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Plexiglass, Digital

You May Also Like
  • Rise and Shine
    By Keith Ladzinski
    Located in Boulder, CO
    An alpha lion, yawning in the early morning hours in the Masai Mara, Kenya.
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Archival Paper

  • LUNE DE SANG
    By Reka Nyari
    Located in New York, NY
    Print is also available in a large size : 63'' x 50'' and is priced at : $16,000. A black and white photographic print, with uniquely handmade puncture designs by the artist, set in a black shadow box frame. The new series “Punctured Ink” incorporates works from Nyari’s ongoing, portrait project titled “Ink Stories”. “Ink Stories”, which was introduced at Nyari’s very first solo gallery exhibit, consists of large-scale nude photographs that explore the concept of self-identity and female empowerment. The series joins six women together, each who have faced adversity, to demonstrate the creation of a strengthened self-image through tattoos. By highlighting the intricate woven threads of ink on each woman’s skin, Nyari proposes the idea that self-empowerment and reconciliation with one’s traumas can be linked to the act of greeting one’s “own skin” or inventing their own story. Nyari has now elevated these intimate photographs in her new Punctured Ink series through the process of puncturing botanical-like references into the surface of each image (thus making each one of a kind). Her inspiration to physically puncture the previously pristine photographic prints stemmed from a childhood memory that occurred while she was living in Finland: “I remembered my parents had this big pad of paper next to the home phone in Finland and I would use my mother’s sewing needles to poke patterns into the paper”. This nostalgic memory in combination with the longing to apply her physical, painterly abilities resulted in the choice to transform these photographs via puncturing the paper. Unlike painting or drawing on the surface of each print, the raised, brail like holes created leave a permanent result, just as a tattoo does on one’s skin. While the surface of an artwork, like skin, is typically preserved and or avoided, Nyari follows in the subject’s footsteps by purposely destroying the pristine surface in order to create a new narrative. The act taps into a long history of tribal scarification which signified a right of passage, permitting the individual to transcend their past traumas and transforming their evolved selves. This notion grounds all of her works. In addition, Nyari’s choice to puncture nature-based patterns into each portrait also has its own significance. She stated that when “talking about scarification and getting over trauma, to me, nature is one of the most healing and beautiful elements.” As Nyari is emphasizing through her photographs, when you add a personal story onto the skin, it is a whole new layer that often becomes biographical. It translates a story to the audience of one’s past, future and wishes. While this concept existed in her previous photographic series, now, through puncturing the surface of each, Nyari is adding another layer of permanence onto her works’ meaning, therefore becoming, as she calls it “ink cubed”. ———————————————————————————————————————————— Born in 1979 in Helsinki, and raised in Finland and Germany, Nyari came to New York City at the age of seventeen. While here, she studied at the School of Visual Arts where she not only began to model but found her passion for photography. Using inspiration from masters such as Helmut Newton and Cindy Sherman, Nyari’s work employs and explores the traditional ideal of beauty and gender to portray sexuality from a predominately female perspective. She utilizes technical elements such as gestures, nudity, the subject’s gaze, objects and more to link this connection of the empowered feminine identity. Her work has been exhibited in numerous galleries throughout the United States and Europe and through such exposure, she has received multiple prestigious awards including the first-place winner of the International Photography Awards in 2010, Beauty Pro Category. Her 225-page Monograph titled “Femme Fatale: Female Erotic Photography...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Archival Ink, Archival Paper, Photographic Paper, Plexiglass, Black and ...

  • The Red Maiden
    Located in New York, NY
    “Ink Stories”, which was introduced at Nyari’s very first solo gallery exhibit, consists of large-scale nude photographs that explore the concept of self-identity and female empowerment...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Film, Archival Ink, Archival Paper, Photographic Paper, Pho...

  • Freydis
    Located in New York, NY
    Black and white photography.
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Film, Archival Ink, Archival Paper, Photographic Paper, Pho...

  • Luis and Hernak, Bolivia, 2022
    By Nick Brandt
    Located in Madrid, ES
    LUIS ZURITA Luis is a teacher at the community school, and also a farmer. In 2021, he lost practically all of his crops due to flooding from overflowing rivers. He remembers that events of this type never used to happen in the community and that weather events have changed enormously. He is aware that these changes and natural disasters are the results of global warming, so he tries to teach this to the children of the community, hoping that it will generate a change in attitude toward these problems. HERNAK Hernak, photographed when he was aged seven, was being sold on Facebook (sigh), when he was just a baby after his mother was killed. He was sent to the city of Santa Cruz, where he was kept in a temporary animal shelter. While there, he had surgery for a faecal impaction, and during recovery, Hernak opened the stitches. He was found in the morning with his intestines exposed and was rushed to the hospital. Somehow, he survived this. Hernak now lives in a large enclosure on a forested hillside at Senda Verde. Like Tarkus the bear, he seems endlessly curious and energetic. As always, the reasons for the decline in jaguars are multifaceted: habitat destruction from deforestation to an increasing number of wildfires; killing by livestock owners who pay their employees extra to shoot them, to feed an increased demand from China for the fangs of the jaguars. The supposed good luck, fortune, protection, and vitality offered by jaguar teeth—merely an extension of the Chinese belief that Asian tiger parts offer the same benefits—is at the heart of the demand. Offering $100 to $400 per tooth for jaguar fangs, the money to be made is too hard for many to resist. In addition to the skins and skulls, even the testicles are prized in China—as an aphrodisiac. (This is as insane as believing the same about rhino horn.) Chinese companies are going into partnership with the Bolivian government, stripping National Parks of resources, which makes matters worse. With the cooperation of the local prison system, Chinese nationals have created a thriving industry in which inmates are forced to create products such as purses and bags...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Archival Paper

  • Juana and Hernak, Bolivia, 2022
    By Nick Brandt
    Located in Madrid, ES
    JUANA FANEO TAE Juana grows peanuts and beans on about two acres. But the increased incidence of both droughts and floods, extreme heat and then cold, and winds, has dramatically impacted production. Lost harvests, once upon a time extremely rare, have become common for all of the farmers around her. The river by her has also become so contaminated due to mining, that now not even the fish can be eaten safely. That contamination, and the sheer amount of plastic pollution, has resulted in much reduced fish populations. Juana is also a naturopath, using plants from the nearby forest, which is a knowledge passed down through generations. Seventy-seven years old at the time of photographing, she had an energy and radiance of someone much younger, and like all the people in these photographs, was unfailingly gracious and patient. HERNAK Hernak, photographed when he was aged seven, was being sold on Facebook (sigh), when he was a just a baby, after the mother was killed. He was sent to the city of Santa Cruz, where he was kept in a temporary animal shelter. While there, he had surgery for a fecal impaction, and during recovery Hernak opened the stitches. He was found in the morning with his intestines exposed and was rushed to the hospital. Somehow, he survived this. Hernak now lives in a large enclosure on a forested hillside at Senda Verde. Like Tarkus the bear, he seems endlessly curious and energetic. As always, the reasons for the decline in jaguars is multifaceted: habitat destruction from deforestation to an increasing number of wildfires; killing by livestock owners who pay their employees extra to shoot them, to feed an increased demand from China for the fangs of the jaguars. The supposed good luck, fortune, protection, and vitality offered by jaguar teeth—merely an extension of the Chinese belief that Asian tiger parts offer the same benefits—is at the heart of the demand. Offering $100 to $400 per tooth for jaguar fangs, the money to be made is too hard for many to resist. In addition to the skins and skulls, even the testicles are prized in China—as an aphrodisiac. (This is as insane as believing the same about rhino horn.) Chinese companies are going into partnership with the Bolivian government, stripping National Parks of resources, which makes matters worse. With the cooperation of the local prison system, Chinese nationals have created a thriving industry in which inmates are forced to create products such as purses and bags...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Archival Paper

Recently Viewed

View All