Whether with his fine art work or his ever present publishing pieces, his exquisite images show the expressive side of both architecture and photography.An award winning photographer, Clemence explores the cross sections of design, art and architecture. He exhibits in the international fine arts circuit, from classic B & W prints to cutting edge large scale photographic urban installation, participating in events such as Fuori Salone in Milan, ArtBasel/DesignMiami and the Venice Architecture Biennale. A published author, his volumeMies van der Rohe’s FARNSWORTH HOUSE
remains to this day the most complete photo documentation of that iconic modern residential design, and a selection of these photos is part of the Mies van der Rohe Archives housed by MoMa, New York. He is widely published in arts, architecture and lifestyle magazines like Metropolis,ArchDaily, Architizer, Casa Vogue Brasil and others. Archi-Photo, aka Architecture Photography, his Facebook photo blog quickly became a photography and architecture community, with over 1.100,000 followers worldwide. An architect by training, Clemence is originally from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and now lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.”
1. How would you describe your photography?
I think my photography is an expressive way of looking at Architecture. I am interested in not just documenting a building but capturing the essence of the design, let’s say the building’s “personality”.
2. How do you personally access creative inspiration?
When photographing, my muse is the light! Architecture is the subject, but the play of light is what makes it come alive, at least for my eyes. When not photographing, I access creative inspiration by looking at other artists I admire and trying to understand their ideas and feel their vision. And today with YouTube and the internet is so easy to do that, to learn from people we admire.
3. Which photographers influenced you, and how did they influence your thinking, photographing, and career path?
Different photographers, and artists, have brought me different things. I admire how Hiroshi Sugimoto works in series, the seascapes one being a constant source of inspiration for me. Wolfgang Tillmans, I like for his freedom of subjects and techniques. But as far as the work itself I think painters have been a more profound influence: the compositions and use of light in Edward Hopper’s paintings, Monet’s search for capturing the elusive atmospheric moment, and his bend towards abstraction.
4. Among your works, which one is your favorite? Why?
That is such a hard question. I have been very fortunate, there are so many! Le Corbusier’s Tower of Shadows in Chandigarh, India, Mies van der Rohe’s Farnsworth House, Oscar Niemeyer’s Brasília buildings…But I am gonna say the essay I shot in Cuiába, Brazil’s westernmost city. It was an unusual commission for me, to shoot historic landmarks, and I was uneasy about it given my focus is mostly modern and contemporary. But once I got there the light was so amazing, so strong, that it made everything pop, colors, textures, details. Yes, I would say the unexpectedness of the light and what I would find there made that experience a very unique and memorable one.
5. What are you working on at the moment?
I am developing a portfolio of landmark projects by Brazilian modern master Oscar Niemeyer. I was just in Brazil and shot some more of his buildings, like the early projects in the Pampulha Complex and the Hotel Nacional in Rio de Janeiro.
6. If you weren’t a photographer what would you like to be?
A dancer or a painter. Maybe a dander painter.
7. When did you realize that photography was a path you wanted to follow full-time?
It was after I moved to Miami Beach that I began to realize that photographing was not just a pastime, a hobby, but a deeper creative outlet that also had professional potential.
8. What has been your biggest challenge?
I would say focusing, no pun intended. There’s so much out there that catches my eyes, so many cities I still haven’t explored, and so much Architecture to connect with!