Aerial Series Mixes 1940s Fashion with Undertones of the Pandemic

Award-winning aerial photographer Brad Walls has released a new photo series that showcases his unique take on conceptual aerial photography, drawing inspiration from 1940s fashion.

Drones as a photographic tool are rarely associated with conceptual photography and tend to be preferred for landscape, architecture, and other types of commercial photographic projects. However, Walls proves that aerial photography can give another dimension to fine artwork, too.

"Conceptual photography is mostly shot on handheld cameras, but I wanted to showcase the value of an alternate viewpoint to convey a meaningful story," he explains.

His signature style utilizes negative space, symmetry and leading lines shot top-down, such as in his earlier project this year -- "Water Geomaids." Walls collaborated with a local, Sydney-based team of synchronized swimmers and choreographer Katrin Ann, who is a former competitor herself.

"Expanse" "Equilibrium" "Emergence" "Elysian"

His latest work -- "Detached, in Harmony" -- also carries his unique style, one that is executed with great precision. Walls tells PetaPixel that with this photographic series he wanted "to harness nuance and meticulous attention to detail to mirror the state of the world during the pandemic."

Like many other creatives, Walls experienced how distant and repetitive life had become and wanted to use this as an inspiration and as a focal point in his work. To express these emotions visually, Walls used repetition in his compositions, combined with his signature symmetry of figures and minimalism. Walls also wanted to showcase the possibilities of drones to create conceptual photography, one that takes the viewer on a visual journey to experience the pandemic in a creative way.

"Birth" "Genesis" "Lampshade"

Each frame was carefully arranged with models placed at even lengths, while the shadows they cast highlighted the element of solitude. "The figures are purposefully static, to symbolize how we have been frozen in time over the past 18 months," says Walls.

Prior to the shoot, Walls sketched out his ideas on his iPad but had to be ready to improvise whilst faced with the harsh sand dunes environment. In order to achieve his desired result, Walls tells PetaPixel that the biggest challenge was timing.

"I had a certain look I was trying to achieve, and I knew that I needed rainfall the night prior to shooting to achieve that flat sand look," he explains. "Patience is a virtue! Also, it can be terribly gusty on sand dunes, so handling the drone at a higher altitude shown in 'sentinel' created some challenges. It must be said that the majority of my work is at low altitudes, so as a drone user I never have too many technical issues on the shoot."

"Sentinel" "Heroine"

He drew inspiration from 1940s fashion photographer Clifford Coffin's "Models Sitting on Sand Dunes" image, which was shot for Vogue in 1949. In a similar vein to Coffin's boundary-breaking photography, Walls is also drawn to similar elements, such as a melancholic sense of loneliness, balanced by warmer hues.

"Neverfear, Fibonacci" "Static" "Tether"

"We all belong to something that separates us. It's a sort of melancholic irony," says Walls about his latest work, which placed second in the 2021 Fine Art Photography Awards "Conceptual" category. It was also awarded Silver in both the prestigious PX2 and Moscow Fine Art Awards of 2021. In the near future, Walls plans to exhibit this body of work in a solo exhibition in 2022.

More of Walls' aerial work can be found on his website and Instagram.

Image credits: All images by Brad Walls and used with permission.

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Aerial Series Mixes 1940s Fashion with Undertones of the Pandemic

Aerial conceptual photography

Photographer Captures the Beauty of Synchronized Swimming from Above

Aerial photographer Brad Walls has published a photographic series depicting synchronized swimmers in an effort to share a different perspective of the artistic sport.

Also known as Bradscanvas, Walls is an award-winning fine art aerial photographer based in Sydney, Australia. His work is a departure from a more traditional aerial photography niche and focuses on top-down portraits using negative space, symmetry, and leading lines. Already closely involved with sports photography in his career such as gymnastics, tennis, and ballet, Walls' latest body of work appreciates the geometrical beauty of synchronized swimmers, also known as artistic swimmers, and the shapes and patterns they create in the process.

Titled "Water Geomaids," his latest project has released just in time for the 2021 Summer Olympic Games in Tokyo, Japan. For it, he set out to create a hybrid photography series that uses his expertise in both aerial and sports photography. The lack of many synchronized swimming photographs was an additional motivation for Wells to pursue this project.

The photographer teamed up with a Sydney-based synchronized swimming team which is choreographed by Katrina Ann who is a former competitor and has taken part in the Commonwealth Games and in multiple World Championships. It wasn't difficult to convince Ann to get involved because "artistic swimmers spend hours every day working to achieve perfection," which is precisely what Walls' photography style encompasses in addition to his creative vision, making the collaboration a great fit.

Prior to the shoot, Walls drew out various geometric shapes that he wanted to translate into his photographs. With Ann's expertise, these shapes were transformed into swimming routines, and, as Wells explains, their "aim was to cherry-pick static positions from routines that build repetition of form and geometric sequences."

Although Wells meticulously planned and prepared for this shoot and all others prior, the photographer says that it doesn't always go as expected and allows a touch of spontaneity because "there will always be an unplanned frame that looks awesome and couldn't possibly have been planned."

In the future, Wells plans to release a photography book to showcase all the sports he has captured from above over the past three years. You can see more of Wells' work on his website or Instagram.

Image credits: All images by Brad Walls and used with permission.

#features #inspiration #aerial #aerialcapture #aerialimages #aerialvideography #sports #sportsphotographer #swimmers #swimming

Photographer Captures the Beauty of Synchronized Swimming from Above

The series captures a sport that is not often photographed.