In the middle of Namibia's endless expanse, where stone, sand and sky meet, there are two pink-coloured chairs with a small metal table. Not a house, not a person, not a shadow far and wide. Just the horizon, the dry earth - and this silent invitation to take a seat. The picture is a contrast in itself: bright colour in a monochrome landscape, human form in completely untouched nature. And this is precisely where its power lies.
The scene seems almost surreal - like something out of a film. Who placed this seating area here? Who might have taken a seat? And why? The picture raises questions and at the same time opens up spaces in the mind. It is symbolic - for pauses, encounters, perhaps also for the absurd beauty of unexpected places.
In the background, the sky stretches across the land like a stage. White-blue cloud formations lend depth and movement to the motif. The ground shows reddish-yellow desert structures that stretch to the horizon. No distractions - just form, colour, air. And very quietly: a hint of humour.
Namibia is known for its spectacular landscapes, dunes, steppe and sky. But pictures like these are not taken at vantage points - but along the roadside. This scene was not planned, but found. That's what makes it so special. The moment is not staged - it happened. And that is precisely why it tells a real story.
Photographically, the motif lives from contradiction: from colour in emptiness, from form in formlessness, from a travel scene that does not explain a story - but hints at one. Nature photography takes on an almost artistic flavour here, beyond classic landscape depictions. The chairs stand there like figures on a stage - but nobody comes, nobody speaks.
As a mural, this work is suitable for living rooms, cafés, surgeries, galleries, libraries, hotels or travel agencies.
I have always enjoyed photography. Even when I was young, I took photos with the Beirette. It even happened to me once that I inserted a film twice ... and the photos I took were very interesting.
I then bought my digital SLR camera in 2014. The first photos..
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