Denis Cherim’s photographs capture the coincidental charisma of everyday scenes: colossal

a black-and-white photo of a palm tree and a cloud framed in a round wire shape

Light, shadows and linear perspective are just some of a photographer’s tricks Denis Cherim‘s sleeve while capturing surprising, well-timed and sometimes ironic glimpses of everyday life (before). “I look for answers in places hidden in plain sight,” the Madrid artist said in a statement. “I feel curiosity about everyday objects with secret desires to be the main character.”

Cherim often uses a digital camera to capture the way lines come together to create surprising symmetry, or how sunlight glints off the sea and appears to come from a street lamp. The photos are part of his ongoing series, The coincidence projectwhich he has been developing since 2012.

a photo of a sidewalk and fence, rotated at a 45 degree angle to play with perspective

“My project allowed me to show the excellence beneath the mundane,” says Cherim. “By playing with perspective and scale, I create juxtapositions that allow different parts of the scene to interact with each other.”

The artist recently began returning to analog methods after receiving a newly launched Pentax 17 film camera, which has already filmed more than 50 rolls. More of his work can be found websiteand follow up on updates Instagram.

a photo of a brick wall with the end of a facade and part of the wall painted white
a photo of a cloud that looks like it's nesting in the top of a fence
a photo of an electric tower with vines growing along the columns
a black and white photo of a dog jumping over a rug, rotated at a 45 degree angle to play with perspective
a shadow of a tree on a high marble wall



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