Roberto Abraham Scaruffi

Thursday 6 August 2015

Feature Shoot



Posted: 06 Aug 2015 05:00 AM PDT
“Gisele,” old german name meaning “beautiful”
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“Gudrun,” old german name meaning “sacred”
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“Elizabeth,” old german name meaning “oath of god”
An important part of Nashalina Schrape’s past belongs to her German roots. Born in Berlin, her grandmother burned all the photos of her grandfather in his SS uniform (“Schutzstaffel,” meaning protective echelon founded by Adolf Hitler in 1925) before the invading Russian Army could associate them with herself and her daughters. Schrape says her photographs in True Fiction exist in this space between her family’s memory and reality. “I attempt to bridge the disappearance of the image of my grandfather and him to the representation of my family’s story and every person’s story that is at once a myriad of feelings and laden with emotional material mostly outside the possibility of verbal articulation.”

The titles she uses in True Fiction reference her German roots, including old German names inspired by several of her relatives names. Schrape situates her subjects in thick, snow-covered forests posed before the viewer with a mysterious, trance-like gaze. Germany has long been associated with its dense forests including The Black Forest in southwest Germany and Schrape uses this connotation in her series. “It is in the journey into the beautiful dark forest that we find ourselves and the hard cycles of life. It is in the not knowing and the in between spaces that we meet ourselves.” Some of the titles in her series seem contradictory. “Kresszenita,” old german name meaning to “spring up, grow, thrive” shows a very old and frail man while “Zander,” old german name meaning “defender of the people” depicts a baby. Schrape believes  this farce on word and image challenges viewer perceptions as fairy tales do. “Often we only look at the surface. But, it can be the animal or very young child that is wisest or showing the most compassion. Or it is the poor that are the richest, emotionally. I am looking for those contradictions.”

“Gerda,” old german name meaning “snow queen and protector”

“Konrad,” old german name meaning “bold counselor or advisor”

“Joachim,” old german name meaning “godly preparedness”

“Kresszenita,” old german name meaning to “spring up, grow, thrive” 

“Zander,” old german name meaning “defender of the people”

“Ottilia & Ottoline,” old german name meaning “wealthy”

“Penrod,” old german name meaning “esteemed commander”

“Erick,” old german name meaning “ruler of the people”

“Mette,” old german name meaning “mighty in battle”

“Katarina,” old german name meaning “pure”
All images © Nashalina Schrape
The post Dark, Mystical Portraits Reveal a Fairy Tale World Based on Old German Legend appeared first onFeature Shoot.
Posted: 05 Aug 2015 07:36 AM PDT

On June 26th, Feature Shoot hosted the second edition of The BlowUp, a new quarterly event in which we ask a selected group of remarkable photographers to each tell the stories behind one of their favorite images. This time, the theme was Subcultures, and Andrew Hetherington chose this unforgettable 2013 snap of Kid Rock enjoying a full-frontal view of a fan aboard “the most infamous of music cruises,” or Kid Rock’s Chillin’ the Most Cruise. 2,500 rap-rock enthusiasts headed to the sea for four days of drinking and shenanigans, and Hetherington was there to witness it all, including the Redneck King and Queen competition. Well, all except for whatever Kid Rock saw on the other side of the camera: “I have no idea what this woman exposed underneath the Budweiser box,” admits the photographer.
The BlowUp is sponsored by Agency Access.
The post Photographer Andrew Hetherington on the Infamous ‘Kid Rock’s Chillin the Most Cruise’appeared first on Feature Shoot.