Photographs for your consideration.

Posts tagged “portrait

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Reach Out

Reach Out


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Jesus Died

Jesus-Died


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Integrity

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Queen in Blue

To see other drag queen photos visit Enso Zombie

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Eat your heart out, Brad Pitt!

Disclosure: This is my boyfriend.
Copyright 2012 Sandra Yeyati

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I see you


Early Education

“Children are like wet cement. Whatever falls on them makes an impression.” - Dr. Hiam Ginnot


Tree Maiden

For more zombie art visit EnsoZombie.com


Knight Bird


Awash in Light’s poetry
the pelican transforms
into wood and butter,
a feathered knight.

But when fickle Light
rescinds Her majesty,
you are treading water
and fish-hungry again.


Thick as a Brick


Echo City

Herstory repeats itself.


The Exalted Pelican


Winner of Honorable Mention Award at the Fourth Annual Show of Shows Exhibition, Von Liebig Art Center, September 2011


Hell Bent


This piece was accepted at the 49th Founders Juried Awards Exhibition in the Von Liebig Art Center, judged by Diane Camber, director emeritus of The Bass Museum of Art with a long-standing involvement at Miami Art Basel.


I call him “Six Eyes”


Juice Break

One day, she will be the president or a neurosurgeon. Until then, a juice break.


Hat Crimes

 


The Opportunist

If you see this fellow, hang on to your catch! 


This giraffe is human.

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There has been a long-standing debate as to whether or not we should attribute human characteristics to animals. It’s called anthropomorphism. Many scientists, such as Pavlov, saw it as a lack of objectivity. Others, like Dian Fossey and Jane Goodall, attributed all sorts of emotions to their subjects. Of course, they were studying gorillas and chimpanzees, the closest living relatives to humans. Frans de Waal wrote, “To endow animals with human emotions has long been a scientific taboo. But if we do not, we risk missing something fundamental, about both animals and us.”

From an artistic viewpoint, I find it very helpful to attribute human emotions to my animal portraits. I’m in good company. Aesop did it in his fables. As did Lewis Carroll, Rudyard Kipling, C.S. Lewis, George Orwell, J.R.R. Tolkien, and the Walt Disney Company.

As for the giraffe, which human emotion do you see in this portrait?

 


Free the Tiger

Photography is magic. I made the cage disappear.


Ibis Echo


Thelma and Louise

Best friends forever.