via The New Yorker: http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/photobooth/2013/12/north-via-south-near-north.html#slide_ss_0=1
We’ve been following Magda Biernat and Ian Webster this past year, as they’ve travelled from Antarctica to Alaska
via The New Yorker: http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/photobooth/2013/11/north-via-south-the-great-plains.html#slide_ss_0=1
“Nine months in Latin America abruptly ends as we re-enter the United States,” Magda Biernat and Ian Webster, the husband-and-wife duo who’ve spent the better part of this year travelling north from Antarctica, on their North Via South trip, wrote to me. We’ve been following their journey since January, and last checked in with them in October, when they explored the Brutalist architecture and Mayan ruins in Central America. They plan on ending their journey in Alaska, this December.
In empty buildings, Magda Biernat finds human traces. Nadia Sussman reports that she looks for the soul in the built environment.
via Lens Blog: http://lens.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/02/26/showcase-130/
In the stillness of empty buildings, Magda Biernat finds human traces. While cropping out location and context, she looks for the soul in the modern built environment. “I’m always drawn to spaces and structures and compositions that are void of people,” Ms. Biernat said. “It’s an intuition. It’s something that I see and I have to get.”
In the stillness of empty buildings, Magda Biernat finds human traces. While cropping out location and context, she looks for the soul in the modern built environment.
“I’m always drawn to spaces and structures and compositions that are void of people,” Ms. Biernat said. “It’s an intuition. It’s something that I see and I have to get.”