Home Artists JONATHAN SMITH

Kooness

Jonathan Smith


United States

23 Works exhibited on Kooness

Represented by

Categories

Don't have the time to browse through this artist's catalogue? Fill in this form to receive a curated selection of their works tailor-made to your needs.

Works by JONATHAN SMITH

Untitled #2

Prints , Digital Print

101.6 x 162.56 x 5.08cm

Contact for price

Untitled #30

2022

Prints , Digital Print

177.8 x 142.24 x 5.08cm

Contact for price

Falls #17

2022

Prints , Digital Print

127 x 101.6 x 5.08cm

Contact for price

Untitled #31

2022

Prints , Digital Print

142.24 x 177.8 x 5.08cm

Contact for price

Fall #46

2022

Prints , Digital Print

127 x 101.6 x 5.08cm

Contact for price

Horizon #26 (Montauk)

2022

Prints , Digital Print

149.86 x 119.38 x 5.08cm

Contact for price

Horizon #10 (Deia)

2022

Prints , Digital Print

149.86 x 119.38 x 5.08cm

Contact for price

Horizon #33 (Pacifica, CA)

2022

119.38 x 149.86 x 5.08cm

Contact for price

River #3

2022

Prints , Digital Print

101.6 x 127 x 5.08cm

Contact for price

River #9

2021

Prints , Digital Print

101.6 x 127 x 5.08cm

Contact for price

Jonathan Smith spent the early years of his career assisting and printing for renowned photographer Joel Meyerowitz, and has had solo exhibitions both in the United States and Internationally. His work consists of large-scale, highly nuanced color photographs of the stark natural beauty and inherent impermanence of landscapes. Smith has been photographing natural landscapes for more than 15 years. Shooting precisely and selectively with incredible detail, Smith often revisits the same site on several occasions until he feels the essential character of the landscape has been revealed to him. This conscious and gradual process of documentation results in meditations on land, water, and air. His investigations of the landscape have led him to the remote locations of northern Iceland and southern Patagonia, where he photographed streams, glaciers, glacial rivers, and waterfalls. These landscapes, devoid of human presence, display a world lost in time.