Bela Borsodi

Bela Borsodi (1966) is an Austrian still life photographer based in New York City.

Biography

Bela Borsodi was born in Vienna in 1966[1] and has lived and worked in New York City since the early 1990s. He studied fine art and graphic design with a great interest in psychology but often incorporated photography in his projects. When his friends started working at magazines and asked him to take photographs for them, Borsodi became more interested in photography. This led to an early career as a photographer where he shot portraits, reportage, and some fashion for editorials in Austria and Germany.[2]

Style

Through combining aspects of fine art, graphic design, craft, and psychology,[3] his work offers a surreal imagery that makes clothing and accessories 3-dimensional.

Borsodi says of his work “I love making things and putting things in an unusual context incorporating various visual languages coming from art and graphic design–eroticism is also a fascination of me that I love exploring".[4]

Commercial work

Bela Borsodi’s work has appeared in publications such as V Magazine, Vogue, Wallpaper Magazine, and Another Magazine. He has worked with fashion brands such as Uniqlo, Baume et Mercier Watches, Hermès, and Selfridges.[5]

Controversy

His “Foot Fetish” story for V Magazine received much publicity, both negative and positive. He was attacked by feminist groups while his photos sparked new discussions on how the female body is sexualized and objectified in fashion and in art.[6]

Collections

Two of his collaborative works with Stefan Sagmeister are included in the Cooper-Hewitt Design Museum at the Smithsonian.[1]

gollark: I can't think of any obvious reason that would break it.
gollark: Please pastebin the AES thing for me.
gollark: I have server logs, but they're not public and I'm on my phone.
gollark: Well, receive messages on every channel, whatever.
gollark: Er, for debugging, you can open skynet channel `*` and it'll show messages on every channel.

References

  1. "Collaborations with Bela Borsodi - Stefan Sagmeister - Collection of Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum". collection.cooperhewitt.org.
  2. "Best Food Forward,"Digital Photographer, Pg. 58-9
  3. Verena "Bela Borsodi's still life personas," Ping Magazine, November 16, 2007
  4. "Featured Artist Interview - Bela Borsodi," Archived July 9, 2009, at the Wayback Machine Taxi Design Network, May 12, 2008
  5. "The Interview with Bela Borsodi" Archived May 29, 2009, at the Wayback Machine Varoom Magazine
  6. Mary Talato "Bela Borsodi Interview" , Pg. 42-7
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.