Photographer Victor Enrich turns a Munich hotel upside down and inside out

A hotel in Munich is stretched, twisted, distorted and exploded in this series of 88 manipulated photographs by Spanish photographer Victor Enrich (+ movie).

Photographer Victor Enrich turns a Munich hotel upside down and inside out

Victor Enrich, who also works as a 3D architectural visualiser, based the entire series of images on one view of the Deutscher Kaiser hotel, a building he passed regularly during a two-month stay in the city.

Photographer Victor Enrich turns a Munich hotel upside down and inside out

Some images show parts of the building turned on their sides, while others show sections of it duplicated or sliced away. Some shots show it curving into different shapes and some show it pulled it apart.

Photographer Victor Enrich turns a Munich hotel upside down and inside out

Describing the manipulation process, Enrich told Dezeen: “What I basically do is create a 3D virtual environment out of a 2D photograph. The process involves capturing the perspective, then the geometry, then the materials and finally the lighting.”

Photographer Victor Enrich turns a Munich hotel upside down and inside out

“The techniques I use are often described as ‘camera matching’ or ‘perspective matching’ and several 3D software packages provide functionalities that allow you to perform this,” he explained, but added that he tends to add do a lot of the work by hand to “reach the level of detail needed to achieve high photorealism”.

Photographer Victor Enrich turns a Munich hotel upside down and inside out

“Then is just a matter of time, much time, spent working on it,” he said.

Photographer Victor Enrich turns a Munich hotel upside down and inside out

Other images in the series include one where the top of the building is transformed into a floating orb.

Photographer Victor Enrich turns a Munich hotel upside down and inside out

There’s also one where the tower features zigzagging walls, and another where the base of the building is missing and the tower is raised up on pilotis.

Photographer Victor Enrich turns a Munich hotel upside down and inside out

Enrich previously worked on a similar series of manipulated images, called City Portraits, which adapted images of other buildings in Munich as well as structures in Riga and Tel Aviv.

Photographer Victor Enrich turns a Munich hotel upside down and inside out

“The experiment started in 2005 and I’ve done several buildings, all from cities where I’ve stayed for periods longer than a year,” he said.

Photographer Victor Enrich turns a Munich hotel upside down and inside out

“If everything goes well, there will be some new works about some American cities during 2014,” he added.

Photographer Victor Enrich turns a Munich hotel upside down and inside out

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hotel upside down and inside out
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Hyper-collage photography by Jim Kazanjian

Hyper-collage photography by Jim Kazanjian

These fictional views of imaginary architecture and landscapes are photographic collages produced by American CGI artist Jim Kazanjian.

Hyper-collage photography by Jim Kazanjian

Above: untitled (tomb), 2012
Top: untitled (temple), 2012

Kazanjian never takes any photographs himself, but instead combines as many as 50 images found on the internet to create each collage in the series.

Hyper-collage photography by Jim Kazanjian

Above: untitled (chateau), 2011

“My method of construction has an improvisational and random quality to it, since it is largely driven by the source material I have available,” says Kazanjian. “I think of the work as a type of mutation which can haphazardly spawn in numerous and unpredictable directions.”

Hyper-collage photography by Jim Kazanjian

Above: untitled (folly), 2010

His latest two images (top) are referred to as “temple” and “tomb”, and show a fortification that appears to be sat on a beach and an entanglement of scaffolding structures engulfed beneath a layer of snow and ice.

Hyper-collage photography by Jim Kazanjian

Above: untitled (low tide), 2009

The artist cites the horror novels of early twentieth century writers H.P. Lovecraft and Algernon Blackwood as inspiration. He explains: “I am intrigued with the narrative archetypes these writers utilise to transform the commonplace into something sinister and foreboding.”

Hyper-collage photography by Jim Kazanjian

Above: untitled (house), 2006

Jim Kazanjian started the series in 2006. His first image featured a dense cluster of buildings balanced above a crumbling pier (above), while others completed since then include a crumbling house being struck by lightning (below) and a castle-like building atop a waterfall.

Hyper-collage photography by Jim Kazanjian

Above: untitled (exterior), 2010

Other manipulated photography projects completed recently include images of houses that appear to be sailing through the sky and collaged landscapes that form complete circles. See more manipulated photography on Dezeen.

Hyper-collage photography by Jim Kazanjian

Above: untitled (backyard), 2011

Here’s a statement from Kazanjian:


My images are digitally manipulated composites built from photographs I find online. The technique I use could be considered “hyper-collage”. I cobble together pieces from photos I find interesting and feed them into Photoshop. Through a palimpsest-like layering process of adding and subtracting, I gradually blend the various parts together. I am basically manipulating and assembling a disparate array of multiple photographic elements (sometimes more than 50) to produce a single homogenized image. I do not use a camera at any stage in the process.

Hyper-collage photography by Jim Kazanjian

Above: untitled (outpost), 2008

My method of construction has an improvisational and random quality to it, since it is largely driven by the source material I have available. I wade through my archive constantly and search for interesting combinations and relationships. Each new piece I bring to the composition informs the image’s potential direction. It is an iterative and organic process where the end result is many times removed from its origin. I think of the work as a type of mutation which can haphazardly spawn in numerous and unpredictable directions.

Hyper-collage photography by Jim Kazanjian

Above: untitled (fortification), 2008

I’ve chosen photography as a medium because of the cultural misunderstanding that it has a sort of built-in objectivity. This allows me to set up a visual tension within the work, to make it resonate and lure the viewer further inside. My current series is inspired by the classic horror literature of H.P. Lovecraft, Algernon Blackwood and similar authors. I am intrigued with the narrative archetypes these writers utilize to transform the commonplace into something sinister and foreboding. In my work, I prefer to use these devices as a means to generate entry points for the viewer. I’m interested in occupying a space where the mundane intersects the strange, and the familiar becomes alien. In a sense, I am attempting to render the sublime.

Hyper-collage photography by Jim Kazanjian

Above: untitled (structure), 2007

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by Jim Kazanjian
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Creative Dismantling by espai MGR

A disused hospital building in Valencia explodes and shifts into new configurations in this series of manipulated photographs by Spanish studio espai MGR (+ slideshow + movie).

Led by espai MGR, the architects manipulated photographs of the former Hospital Universitario La Fe to draw attention to the need for “urban recycling” to revive empty buildings.

Creative Dismantling by espai MGR

“Nothing is unrelated in a city. To empty a building and leave a black spot in the city is something that somehow also affects the closest environment,” architects Manuel López and Bernat Ivars told Dezeen.

Creative Dismantling by espai MGR

“We wanted to show a building that evolves parallel to a society more and more aware of the importance of urban recycling,” they added. “A building able to be restructured and to change in order to house new functions without needing to be demolished and rebuilt.”

Creative Dismantling by espai MGR

An accompanying website tells the story of the hospital through a cryptic fable about an octopus and a broken pitcher, which references a fairytale about a proud milkmaid whose pail of milk falls from her head.

Creative Dismantling by espai MGR

The broken pitcher, or pail, suggests an object that has been badly managed and can no longer function properly, the architects explain.

Creative Dismantling by espai MGR

The images accompanying the text are not directly connected to each other, but are organised like a soundtrack accompanying a scene in a film. “For instance, in the moment the pitcher is broken, the building breaks with it, depicting an interior full of possibilities,” they said.

Creative Dismantling by espai MGR

Creative Dismantling was led by espai MGR with the assistance of Aitor Varea as a product of Proyectos con Final Feliz, a work and research cooperative based in Valencia.

Creative Dismantling by espai MGR

Last year we reported on another photo-manipulation project by espai MGR, which imagined impossible Lego structures filling vacant plots in Valencia.

Creative Dismantling by espai MGR

We recently reported on another set of surreal photographs in which Parisian houses appear to be floating in the sky like kites.

Creative Dismantling by espai MGR

See all our stories about manipulated photography »
See all our stories from Valencia »

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Creative Dismantling_short story about strange cities_ep1

Authors: Bernat Ivars, Manuel López
Collaborators: Fran Azorin, Lola Bataller, Isabel González, Eva Raga, Aitor Varea

Abstract

When an institutional bulding is disused, its stillness infects life around it. Creative Dismantling tries to reverse this situation by means of injecting movement both visually and reflexively. The case study is the former Hospital La Fe, currently a large container without use in Valencia, Spain.

This building served as a public hospital since its opening in 1968 until its closure in February of 2011. Once all its services have been transferred to a new location, its around 150,000 sq m of floor area are ready to be reinvented in order to keep on energising its unbreakable bond with the neighborhood of Campanar.

By means of a different language, we pursue to make visible a problem and turn it into an opportunity: the establishment of the former Hospital La Fe as a symbol of urban recycling.

Text

The creative dismantling seeks to reconstruct the different links of urban reality. The goal is to get the city to maintain ecosystem equilibrium relationships among agencies so that the dynamics of each complement the other. This requires a reinterpretation of the usual meaning of the elements that turn problems into opportunities. A rearticulation to heal wounds urban partially through the influence of reflex areas.

We talked about a long-term process where the fundamental piece of change is not the result but the movement itself. The real destruction of a building is not its disappearance but its stillness: stillness that extends to everything that surrounds it. Some buildings should disappear. Others gradually disappear. In one case or another, they must always give way to a new life. The task of the architect is also to decide the optimal way to deconstruction. Progress sometimes appears with removing the first stone.

A brand new symbology

Creative dismantling is not unless it contributes to activate a fair and complex social economy. As a sign of a new attitude, creative dismantling has a symbolic character that feeds on what makes us individuals and allows us to live everyday. Halfway between utopia and an unavoidable step whose border a change of attitude, creative dismantling does not focus on the material but also on values, dismantling institutions stacked in a wrong time. How can something die with dignity and become more important during the process of death than in life? We only have to redefine the direction taken so far and adopt a more coherent logic. In the end, asserting only common sense.

Former Hospital Universitario La Fe was opened in 1968 to meet the needs of the health area of Valencia. This service was guaranteed by the involvement of almost 7,000 employees. For 42 years it served daily to over 600 patients. During its long period of activity it acted as an economic and social promoter of a neighborhood that became identified with his existence. his intense activity contributed to the creation of housing and services for the broad set of employees, patients and families.

In 2001, the Ministry of Health of the Generalitat Valenciana announced the decision to build a new La Fe hospital to replace the current centre. The transfer of all its services to the new location took place between November 2010 and February 2011, since when the new site has assumed the continuity of all inherited health responsibilities.

Today, the old centre is one of the most important urban opportunities in the city. About 150,000 m2 of floor area remain ready to be reinvented and continue its task of energising an unbreakable bond with the neighbourhood of Campanar.

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by espai MGR
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Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

The residential buildings of Paris appear to be sailing through the sky like kites in these dream-like images created by French photographer Laurent Chéhère (+ slideshow).

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

“All these flying houses are the fruits of my travels in the popular districts of Paris; Ménilmontant and Belleville,” Laurent Chéhère told Dezeen, explaining how he manipulated photographs of real buildings to create impossible images inspired by “the poetic vision of the old Paris.”

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

Some of the buildings pictured look just like typical houses, while others boast unusual features like a giant window or wonky walls.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

“Sometimes I use the realistic, metaphoric, symbolic and subjective, if it is necessary to tell a story,” said the artist.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

One image shows a circus tent, with juggling sticks and balls falling out of its open base (above), while another shows a caravan gliding through the sky (below).

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

A house on fire is pictured in one shot (below), while traces of life can be spotted in some of the other residences, such as smoke billowing from chimneys and legs hanging out of a window.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

“I tried to get these sad houses out of the anonymity of the street, to help them to tell their story, true or fantasised,” said Chéhère.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

The images are on show at the Galerie Paris-Beijing in Paris until 8 December.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

See more manipulated photography on Dezeen, including images of buildings pulled apart.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

See all our stories about photography »

Here’s some more information about the exhibition from Galerie Paris-Beijing:


LAURENT CHÉHÈRE
Flying Houses

Galerie Paris-Beijing is pleased to present the work of the French photographer Laurent Chéhère.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

Employing traditional photography and digital manipulation, his surreal series, Flying Houses, elevates architecture to a new level. The artist takes a variety of residential structures out of their defining neighbourhood backdrops. Released from their choked streets, the houses float amidst the clouds, like kites.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

Inspired by the poetic vision of the old Paris and by the famous short-length film The Red Balloon directed by Albert Lamorisse, Laurent Chéhère has strolled around the Belleville and Ménilmontant neighbourhoods, glancing at their typical and “tired” houses.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

Captured mid-journey, moving above the clouds as they remain tethered out of frame, like balloons to their thin strings, these old edifices glide high above the surface, revealing their hidden beauty.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

Some of flying houses are adorned with clotheslines and flowers pots, while others carry signs and businesses away from the fire flames… All of them seem to find a second life, uprooted from their native city and heading for other skies.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

Laurent Chéhère’s Flying Houses are a real invitation to travel and a metaphor of the fleetingness of the world that allow us to plunge into a dreamlike and moving world full of cheerfulness and humour.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

Laurent Chéhère (Paris, 1972) is an award-winning creative advertiser and tireless traveller. From Shanghai to Valparaiso, from La Paz to Lhasa, from Bamako to Bogota, he feeds his imagination and gives us his view of the world.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

He loves exploring the cities, suburbs, countries, as he likes to explore all fields of photography from reportage to conceptual image. Laurent Chéhère exposed the series Flying Houses at Dock en Seine City of Fashion and Design in June 2012 where he won the Prix Special. The series is being shown in China at the 2012 Pingyao International Photography Festival.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

From Thursday 25th October to Saturday 8th December 2012.

Galerie Paris-Beijing
54, rue du Vertbois
75003 Paris

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Laurent Chéhère
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