YAN Miranda Mayer

CHF 1.00

Biografie:

My name is Yan Miranda, I am currently attending a Bachelor degree in Photography at ECAL. My style has many facets, it waves in different horizons, I like my projects to be different from each other aesthetically but the concepts treated, always have a leaning towards the social and cultural anthropology and fashion.

Werkbeschrieb:

Snow in the south is a project that I did during my last semester at the university of art ECAL in collaboration with creative director/stylist Brutus Labiche and by the supervision of Nicolas Poillot. The series focuses on a future/present post degradation of climate change and questions how the style of forthcoming African and south American generations would look like.

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Biografie:

My name is Yan Miranda, I am currently attending a Bachelor degree in Photography at ECAL. My style has many facets, it waves in different horizons, I like my projects to be different from each other aesthetically but the concepts treated, always have a leaning towards the social and cultural anthropology and fashion.

Werkbeschrieb:

Snow in the south is a project that I did during my last semester at the university of art ECAL in collaboration with creative director/stylist Brutus Labiche and by the supervision of Nicolas Poillot. The series focuses on a future/present post degradation of climate change and questions how the style of forthcoming African and south American generations would look like.

Biografie:

My name is Yan Miranda, I am currently attending a Bachelor degree in Photography at ECAL. My style has many facets, it waves in different horizons, I like my projects to be different from each other aesthetically but the concepts treated, always have a leaning towards the social and cultural anthropology and fashion.

Werkbeschrieb:

Snow in the south is a project that I did during my last semester at the university of art ECAL in collaboration with creative director/stylist Brutus Labiche and by the supervision of Nicolas Poillot. The series focuses on a future/present post degradation of climate change and questions how the style of forthcoming African and south American generations would look like.