Yellowkorner x Acc Club

Cotton Candy

Mina Mimbu

Born in Japan, Mina Mimbu dreams of worlds with poetic and entrancing atmospheres. Subtle and candid, her work flirts with the borders of reality and draws the spectator into captivating landscapes.

Based in New Zealand, the photographer is inspired by the world of childhood to create her images and aims to interpret while suffusing these scenes with a little magic. Coupled with magnificent panoramas of the Pacific, her photographs leave us bewitched, as Cotton Candy attests, in which clouds become candyfloss that we never tire of devouring with our eyes.

Other Half

Mina Mimbu

Japanese artist Mina Mimbu is inspired by her two sons and draws on the innocence of childhood worlds to create candid images, enabling her to escape reality.

Coupled with the magnificent and elusive landscapes of the Pacific, she leaves the spectator with the irresistible desire to reconnect with their inner child.

Bloom

Mina Mimbu

Based in New Zealand, Japanese artist Mina Mimbu is inspired by the magnificent panorama of the Pacific as much as by the innocent charm of childhood to create poetic images full of gentle magic. Through this image, the artist leads the audience into a world in search of peace. Her message: “Heal the world. Forget hate. Lend a hand to those in need.”

Adventure

Mina Mimbu

Based in New Zealand, Japanese artist Mina Mimbu finds inspiration in the sumptuous panoramas of the Pacific, or in the innocent charm of childhood, to create poetic images filled with magic and tenderness. Subtle and sincere, Life is Either A Daring Adventure or Nothing pushes the viewer to dream big.

Rainbow

Mina Mimbu

Japanese artist Mina Mimbu is inspired by her two sons and draws on the innocence of childhood worlds to create candid images, enabling her to escape reality.

Coupled with the magnificent and elusive landscapes of the Pacific, she leaves the spectator with the irresistible desire to reconnect with their inner child.

Blue Angel

Olivier Lavielle

It is a Swiss plane restored as it was originally by passionate people as you can only find in Switzerland or in the USA. It is a DC3 “Dakota”, an extraordinarily solid and reliable machine. It is an aircraft that I love. It has, unarmed, liberated Europe from Nazi tyranny, avoided the Berlin blockade, and truly launched the history of civil aviation.

A small plane full of courage, it is a pleasure to see it still flying in our skies with such elegance and delicacy. When it is on the ground, its tail wheel gives it the air of having always the head in the clouds. It is a dreamy plane

Nyc east river with empire state

Bernhard Hartmann

Born in Frankfurt in 1955, Bernhard Hartmann began his artistic career at the age of 18 as a press photographer for a German newspaper. He studied art and became a landscape photographer after discovering this medium with the aid of his parents’ Polaroid. He creates dramatic and cinemascopic images that are often compared to the Romantic paintings of Caspar David Friedrich, but also to the dramatic natural scenes by English painter William Turner.

He prefers to photograph places where the arts are practised and expressed and thus presents series on operas, theatres, or European manors. A lawyer in Munich, Bernard Hartmann now lives near Lake Starnberg in the Bavarian Alps. His works belong to numerous private collections and have been shown in the United States, Spain, Italy, and Germany.

He was elected “Photographer of the Year” by a Swiss magazine and won the “American Black and White Photo Awards” as well as the “Panoramic Epson Award”.

Island Sunset

Igor Vitomirov

Igor Vitomirov says “less is always more”, to describe his refined approach to photography. Here, admire the idealized view of a sunset over the island of Brac in Croatia using its minimalist approach.

For this series with its stylised accents, Igor Vitomirov directs his lens towards the star of the daytime. He then lets his creative drive loose in post-production. The artist thus refines his emotions and transposes them into different colours and abstract forms, obtaining unique, minimalist, and poetic results.

Superman 1(SuperDad)

François Fontaine

The superheroes of our childhood are revealed through the lens of François Fontaine. Born in Paris in 1968, he describes himself as a photographer-traveller.

Today he is exhibited around the globe and leads several projects, exploring the theme of individual and collective memory. Through a play on light and colour, he manages to bring to life unforgettable and universal memories.

A Dreamer In The Swimming Pool

Elena Iv-Skaya

The colours and contrasts that fill Elena Iv-Skaya’s fashion shots enable her to advocate femininity and portray her subjects through a simple, creative, and powerful approach.

To create “Poolside series 2” in July 2017 on Reunion Island, she hunted through the local hardware stores to find all kinds of offbeat, graphic, and vintage items to set off her model, the sublime Cassandre Lauret.

L’Imagination

Les Animaux Imaginaires

The encounter between fauna and flora is an inexhaustible source of inspiration. In front of the lens of Charles Groc de Salmiech, its timeless beauty gives birth to “imaginary animals”, fascinating magical creatures!

Among them, meet the flowering red ibis, the sleeping giraffe, the great thinking lion chief, the curious Watusi, and the enchanted Jaguar.

Ebony And Ivory

Pedro Jarque Krebs

By immortalising wild animals in their natural habitat and then working on the lighting in postproduction to display them against a neutral backdrop, Pedro Jarque Krebs aims to help break down the barrier that we have built up over the centuries concerning our relationship with the animal kingdom.

The darkness of the backdrop and the play of light and shade allow the photographer to create the atmosphere necessary to take an emotional approach to them. Our contemplation of animals has always represented a means of reflecting on the origins of humanity.

Light And Passion

Pedro Jarque Krebs

By immortalising wild animals in their natural habitat and then working on the lighting in postproduction to display them against a neutral backdrop, Pedro Jarque Krebs aims to help break down the barrier that we have built up over the centuries concerning our relationship with the animal kingdom.

The darkness of the backdrop and the play of light and shade allow the photographer to create the atmosphere necessary to take an emotional approach to them. Our contemplation of animals has always represented a means of reflecting on the origins of humanity.

Cache – Cache

Nolwenn Hadet

Nolwenn Hadet has never left her native Brittany except to undertake sensational expeditions to the remotest regions of the world. Born in 1973 in the Morbihan, France, she has been passionate about photography since childhood. 

Her images are irrevocably linked to her travels and to the rare animals that she encounters on her travels, from the vast plains of Botswana in Southern Africa to the frozen surfaces of Arctic ice floes. Black-and-white photograph of a family of polar bears, with two cubs half hidden in their mother’s fur.

Tenderness

Stefan Christmann

Stefan Christmann developed a passion for emperor penguins during a winter spent in Antarctica as a physicist, his initial training. Since then, he has made this friendly bird the main subject of his photographs.

 “The emperor penguin is an example for us,” he emphasizes, “even in a hostile environment, it manages to adapt thanks to the solidarity between all members of the community.” Both aesthetic and touching, his photos have since gone around the world.

The Godfather

Stefan Christmann

Stefan Christmann developed a passion for emperor penguins during a winter spent in Antarctica as a physicist, his initial training. Since then, he has made this friendly bird the main subject of his photographs.

 “The emperor penguin is an example for us,” he emphasizes, “even in a hostile environment, it manages to adapt thanks to the solidarity between all members of the community.” Both aesthetic and touching, his photos have since gone around the world.

OOPS DID I SCARE YOU 

PEDRO JARQUE KREBS

By immortalising wild animals in their natural habitat and then working on the lighting in postproduction to display them against a neutral backdrop, Pedro Jarque Krebs aims to help break down the barrier that we have built up over the centuries concerning our relationship with the animal kingdom. The darkness of the backdrop and the play of light and shade allow the photographer to create the atmosphere necessary to take an emotional approach to them. Our contemplation of animals has always represented a means of reflecting on the origins of humanity.
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