Vantage: Ryan Koopmans

Author:   Ryan Koopmans
Publisher:   Black Dog Press
ISBN:  

9781912165186


Pages:   256
Publication Date:   27 September 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Our Price $90.43 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

Vantage: Ryan Koopmans


Add your own review!

Overview

Three things that made Black Dog Press acquire this book: 1.Ryan Koopmans is an incredibly talented, award-winning photographer, and this is his first monograph 2.Ryan photographs all over the world (usually from an unusual vantage point), which makes the locations/subject matters within the book appealing to many different markets 3.The book encompasses many different genres: photography, travel, architecture and history again, appealing to many different markets If this author came to you from another (large) publisher, what was the story? Did you get the book because of a personal relationship? We approached Ryan because we saw and liked his work, and were also aware of his large Instagram following, so were confident his photography would make an excellent book Ryan has both Dutch and Canadian heritage. He was born in Amsterdam, but was raised in Victoria on Vancouver Island, Canada. He travels extensively for his work (on Instagram his current location is Sweden, and the next is Saudi Arabia)

Full Product Details

Author:   Ryan Koopmans
Publisher:   Black Dog Press
Imprint:   Black Dog Press
ISBN:  

9781912165186


ISBN 10:   191216518
Pages:   256
Publication Date:   27 September 2019
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

The Symmetry and Chaos of the World's Megacities Architectural photographer Ryan Koopmans spent the past decade shooting hi-res photographs of the world's biggest cities. The results are mind-blowing. Ryan Koopmans was planning to attend architecture school after earning his bachelor's degree around a decade ago from the University of British Columbia. But while working on his application portfolio, which included a photography component, the Dutch-born Canadian realized that he was more interested in shooting buildings than designing them. Today, Koopmans is an award-winning commercial photographer who has shot for Mercedes-Benz, Montblanc, and Ritz-Carlton. His first monograph, Vantage, will be published later this month by Black Dog Press. The book collects 10 years' worth of Koopmans' extraordinary architectural photography, captured in 17 countries around the world. Although some images were shot on commission, Koopmans took most of them on his own time during breaks between commercial gigs. He's particularly drawn to the architecture of former Soviet states like Georgia, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine, where monolithic, communist-era apartment towers stand cheek by jowl with postmodern skyscrapers. I'm less interested in specific buildings or architects than in the built environment, and how it reflects a country's identity, Koopmans says. I find those Soviet apartment blocks fascinating because of their symmetry and rigidity, even though I know the experience of people who live there isn't necessarily the best. He's similarly entranced by China's new megacities, which seem to spring up overnight in the middle of nowhere. Even when shooting the more familiar cityscapes of Dubai, Hong Kong, or New York, Koopmans manages to create fresh-looking images by finding unique vantage points, often by scouting his locations on Google Earth. As a rule, he tries to get as high as he can--one of his favorite tricks is talking local work crews into letting him shoot from the cockpit of a construction crane. Most of the time they say 'no problem' and bring me up, he adds. They often want to show their project off. In Iraqi Kurdistan, workers rigged up a rope harness for Koopmans, hoisted him high in the air, and let him dangle there taking pictures with his Canon EOS 5DS R. Shot in ultrahigh resolution, the photographs are intended to be seen in large-scale prints on the wall of a gallery or museum. The forthcoming book will be 12 inches by 9 inches, and Koopmans sells limited edition prints through his website. At the proper size, you notice little scenes and details that I didn't even pick up when I was taking the pictures, he says. You can't get a sense of the scale by looking at them on Instagram. --Michael Hardy Wired.com Canadian photographer's book provides awe-inspiring Vantage point of world's megacities Award-winning photographer has spent past decade travelling the world in search of awe-inspiring images. Growing up on Canada's West Coast irrevocably informed Ryan Koopmans' eye for photography. Just, maybe not in the way that one might initially imagine. Between his time spent growing up on Vancouver Island, and other assorted travels throughout his youth, Koopmans gained an appreciation for capturing vast spaces. I was exposed to a wide variety of landscape, both natural and built, new and old, Koopmans says. But, when he decided to turn his attention to landscape and architecture photography full-time after a foray into fashion and photojournalism, it wasn't dense forests or rocky coastlines that proved to attract his lens again-and-again. Instead, it was what Koopmans refers to as the built environment. I am mostly drawn to the massive sense of scale that some urban development encompasses, as well as surreal architecture and its relationship with the natural world, Koopmans says. Not only do these subjects make for interesting visuals, I think that they tell a story about a place: its history, people, socio-economic and political ambitions -- and more. Through his lens, the award-winning photographer provides observers with a breathtaking perspective of man-made environments -- primarily in urban centres and international megacities. The photos often come from a straight-on or a top-down vantage point that serves to transport observers to dizzying heights. Not to mention, it makes one imagine just what type of adventure Koopmans might have endured in order to capture them. I am always trying to gain access to tall buildings and high vantage points in different locations around the world, Koopmans admits. Once, in Erbil, a city in the Kurdistan region of Iraq, I was lifted to the top of a massive tower by means of hanging onto a rope that was attached to the end of a construction crane. It lifted a worker and myself hundreds of feet into the air and dropped us on top of the building to shoot as there was no elevator constructed yet. The unique vantage point that Koopmans has become known for, coincidentally, also provided him with the perfect title for his first book, a monograph titled Vantage (Black Dog Press, GBP$34.95). In the 256-page hardcover tome, Koopmans shares an interesting assemblage of images shot in locations around the world, including: Brazil, Canada, China, Dubai, Georgia, Hong Kong, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, the Netherlands, Russia, Singapore, Spain, South Korea, Sweden, Ukraine, and the U.S. Vancouver, Victoria and Prince Rupert all make appearances in the book. The arresting collection of images are prefaced with a piece by curator/author Marvin Heiferman, and are further featured alongside a handful of 10 voices that sound-off on the topics of environmental impact and locational identity, included among them: TJ Watt, co-founder of the Ancient Forest Alliance; Petronel Nieuwoudt, founder of the Care for Wild Rhino Sanctuary and a former Endangered Species Unit Captain with the South African Police; Anastasiia Fedorova, a Russian writer; and Heidi Locher, architect and founder of Studio Locher. Koopmans has spent the better part of a decade travelling the world and been to a lot of places in search of the perfect shot. He admits the one destination that comes first-to-mind that he'd still like to visit is Iran -- There are many locations there that I have long been interested in photographing, from highrises in Tehran to villages in the mountains. My hope is to go there next spring. -- and he pointed toward the former Soviet countries as among his favourite to photograph so far. I'm very drawn to photographing Soviet-modernism and brutalism, he explains. The region was also the source of Koopmans's favourite image to appear on the pages of Vantage, a photo of a dog standing in a derelict room that is filled with trash. Shot in the town of Tskaltubo, in the country of Georgia, this scene was in the basement of an old Soviet-era hotel abandoned during the collapse of the U.S.S.R., Koopmans explains. A Georgian woman, with connections to the government, saw this photograph of mine on a TV station that was featuring my work and immediately mobilized local authorities to go and clean up the trash. The room is now empty, after having been filled with garbage and debris since 1992. In addition to sharing his images in a tangible form, Vantage offers Koopmans with the chance to share a perspective of his photos that's more aligned with the way he intended for them to be seen. Meaning, the images are viewed in person, in larger scale -- rather than on a tiny screen. Instagram is a great tool to spread your work and have it seen by a wide audience, however it is limited in that the pictures shared are small, seen on very small screens, Koopmans says of the platform, which sees him boast a following of more than 30,000 on his account @ryan.koopmans. That is why I am excited to release this book and limited-edition prints, as the book is large and the big prints give these images much more visual impact. Ultimately, that is how my photographs are meant to be viewed. The online sharing of his images has its upsides, though. As Koopmans's following has grown, so too have his opportunities. Plus, he gets a kick out of hearing back from fans and followers from around the world who are moved by the way his images make them rethink a destination. It's fun when people are surprised that a particular building or location that I've photographed exists in a city that they are familiar with, Koopmans says. When you show someone a place that they may have seen many times before, but are now looking at it in a new way, you know that you have created something of value. --Aleesha Harris Vancouver Sun


Author Information

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

Aorrng

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List