Portfolio 2, Painting with Light Projection Photography with Kodachrome Transparencies by John Neville Cohen2 of 5 |
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![]() Fiery Flamenco |
![]() Plate 17 |
![]() Sea Nymph's Mirror |
![]() Queen's Guard |
Plate 20 |
![]() The Preacher |
![]() Plate 22 |
![]() Churchill |
![]() Plate 24 |
![]() Plate 25 |
![]() Plate 26 |
![]() Plate 27 |
![]() Plate 28 |
![]() Dragonfly |
![]() Plate 30 |
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These images were all
created by John Neville Cohen using his unique John loved Kodachrome, not for making polite little prints, but for blasting his photos onto a giant screen! What he did not love were the unavoidable intruders of reality: electric wires, phone cables, and other visual gatecrashers that insisted on ruining his perfect holiday landscapes. Then came a lucky accident. While
setting up his projector one day, screen still folded away,
an image landed on a pair of curtains. Suddenly the portrait
looked transformed, textured, and so intriguing! That set
off a spark of curiosity and sent John experimenting:
projecting images onto anything that would hold still, then
photographing the results. That is how, in the late 1950s,
his exciting unique analogue Projection Photography
technique was born, although it became technically
complicated, and decades ahead of its time, his creations
were also striking, and artistic. |
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All
images and text, within this site, are copyright
and may not be copied, other than for personal
reference,
without written permission from John
Neville Cohen. ©1960 John N. Cohen |
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