Texas born photographer Jeremy Kost (at right) is known as New York
City’s "Polaroid artist," advancing a technique exploited by art world
legends Andy Warhol and David Hockney. Bucking the trend of increasing
numbers of digital images in contemporary art, Kost creates his work
with Polaroid cameras. Because celebrities (Paris Hilton, Lindsey Lohan
and the like), embrace his creative methods, Kost has direct access to
their relaxed environments. Jeremy exposes the reality of celebrities
and the fashion/art world elite in compelling, unstaged Polaroid
photographs.
While celebrity photographs made him
famous, he is perhaps best known for his homoerotic Polaroids of young
men with buffed bodies and the gritty, underground scenes of the East
Village and the Lower East Side (he lives and works in NYC). Instead of
relying on lighting, make-up, or styling, Kost seizes upon the
unvarnished moment. Whether his shots convey the energy of a hedonistic
smile, or the honest look of true exhaustion, Kost's images and
photographic montages reveal the character of his subjects with
immediacy.
Jeremy has had
numerous exhibitions of his work in major cities around the world,
including New York, Dallas, Miami, Washington DC, Paris and Tokyo.
Recently he was included in The International Center of Photography's
Triennial Exhibition "Dress Codes". His work has been published in print
media such as V and Vogue Hommes Japan, and in 2009 his book
"Love.Hate.Nature." was published by The International Center of
Photography.
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