John Houck’s multi-layered photographic compositions immortalize nostalgic objects from the artist’s childhood, manipulated in the studio and in post-production into unreal still-life arrangements. Stamp -X, Stamp -Y consists of a careful collage of uneven scraps of paper. On their versos, these fragments of blue, white, and manila papers hold the artist’s childhood stamp collection; turned as they are, these shards of envelope become planes of colors that Houck manipulates in a vaguely grid-like fashion.
An MFA graduate from UCLA, John Houck works primarily in the medium of photography and specializes in still-life vignettes. To make his works, Houck arranges an object on a sheet of paper, photographs, and prints it, then places that print back into a new composition, repeating the process again and again until arriving at an aggregate image. The layers appear to be digitally altered, but he does not utilize any postproduction interventions. But Houck is not a purist by any means; he is significantly influenced by his professional experience as a computer programmer, and his artistic methodology mirrors a kind of algorithmic code. By referencing a conventional artistic genre through an iterative and contingent process, Houck offers up photography as a mode of thought.
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Architect at the cutting edge: how making Chinese paper decorations became Nick Tsao’s second career | South China Morning Post Architect at the cutting edge: how making Chinese paper decorations became Nick Tsao’s second career Profile Nick Tsao talks about the Foster + Partners internship that led to him becoming an architect, learning the art of paper cutting and promoting Hong Kong culture Kate Whitehead + FOLLOW Published: 7:15am, 7 Feb, 2024 Why you can trust SCMP My parents were both born in Hong Kong and went to boarding school in the UK, where they met while at university...
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Box Trucks – Some of the Best Graffiti On Wheels | Brooklyn Street Art BROOKLYN STREET ART LOVES YOU MORE EVERY DAY Jaime Rojo has built an impressive collection of photographs of these, capturing the essence of New York’s streets through his lens with an array of box trucks that weave and jolt their way through traffic, often seen opening their gates to load and unload amidst the noise of city life...