Layered Photographs by Nerhol, the photograpy collective which includes Yoshihisa Tanaka and Ryuta Liada. This is their latest project and consists of piles of photographs rather than a single image. Their subjects sat for three minutes while they took several pictures of them and then the prints were stacked and cut to reveal the layers, resulting in a warping of the subject’s subtle movements.

Russian photographers Vadim Makhorov and Vitaliy Raskalov, with a group of friends ignored regulations prohibiting the public from climbing on the Pyramids at Giza, Egypt, and the result: these spectacular photos.

by Dan Mountford

Double Exposure Portraits by Dan Mountford

The Women Who Married a Horse, Your Reflection (2012)
by Wilma Hurskainen

The Women Who Married a Horse, Your Reflection (2012)

by Wilma Hurskainen
No Name, Invisible (2011)
by Wilma Hurskainen

No Name, Invisible (2011)

by Wilma Hurskainen

No Name, Waves (2012)
by Wilma Hurskainen

No Name, Waves (2012)

by Wilma Hurskainen

Dustin Edward Arnold and Nicholas Alan Cope’s Otherworldly Fashion Photography 

Time-lapse Images of Nude Dancers:

“I tried to capture the beauty of both the human body’s figure and its motion. The figure in the image, which is formed into something similar to a sculpture, is created by combining 10,000 individual photographs of a dancer. By putting together uninterrupted individual moments, the resulting image as a whole will appear to be something different from what actually exists. With regard to these two viewpoints, a connection can be made to a human being’s perception of presence in life.”

- Shinichi Maruyama

Non-destructive street interventions by artist Aakash Nihalani

by Marcel Christ

by Markus Reugels.

by Markus Reugels.

Picasso’s Light Paintings:

In 1949, LIFE magazine’s Gijon Mili visited and documented Pablo Picasso in the South of France. Mili was known for technical innovations, and Picasso, appear of Mili’s talents, wanted to try and few experiments of his own. Alas, these light drawings were part of the documentation.

As LIFE explains, “This series of photographs, known ever since as Picasso’s ‘light drawings’ were made with a small electric light in a darkened room; in effect, the images vanished as soon as they were created - and yet they were perpetuated in these amazing photographs. 

Wind Fire, Thérèse Duncan on the Acropolis Athens (1921)
Edward Steichen

Wind Fire, Thérèse Duncan on the Acropolis Athens (1921)

Edward Steichen

Mary Steichen (1917)
by Edward Steichen 

Mary Steichen (1917)

by Edward Steichen