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640 photographs, licensable by the hour or the century.

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Showing results for "Blue Teal"

A magnificent large-scale mural transforms an industrial warehouse facade in Portland's Central Eastside district, featuring vibrant psychedelic animals rendered in intricate mandala patterns. The artwork showcases an owl with piercing eyes, a majestic bear, butterflies, and other creatures painted in electric blues, purples, oranges, and greens against the building's teal base. A lone pedestrian walks past the multi-windowed structure, providing human scale to this explosion of street art creativity that epitomizes the neighborhood's artistic renaissance.
Vibrant animal-themed murals cover a warehouse building on Southeast Salmon Street in Portland's Central Eastside industrial district.
Kaleidoscopic Animal Spirits Adorn Southeast Portland Warehouse
C
Two film lab technicians work in concentrated silence within the intimate confines of Blue Moon Camera & Machine in Portland's Saint Johns neighborhood. A woman with curly hair in a teal sweater sits at a processing station surrounded by hanging film strips, while her colleague in a mustard cardigan examines prints at the counter. The cramped workspace pulses with the quiet intensity of analog craftsmanship, fluorescent light casting clinical precision over rows of negatives and the accumulated ephemera of photographic tradition.
Technicians process film at Blue Moon Camera & Machine in Portland's Saint Johns district, continuing the tradition of analog photography in the digital age.
Film Lab Technicians at Blue Moon Camera
B
Two film lab technicians work in the intimate, equipment-filled processing room at Blue Moon Camera & Machine in Portland's Saint Johns neighborhood. A woman with curly red hair sits at a professional film processing station while her colleague in a mustard yellow cardigan examines negatives by the counter. The warm fluorescent lighting illuminates vintage processing equipment, coiled cords, and the organized chaos of a working analog photography lab.
Technicians process film at Blue Moon Camera & Machine, a beloved analog photography lab in Portland's Saint Johns district.
Film Lab Technicians at Blue Moon Camera
B
Naomi Likayi stands confidently before her vibrant street art mural on the boarded World Trade Center in downtown Portland. The young Black artist wears an oversized plaid coat against the cool Pacific Northwest air, her figure juxtaposed against swirling blues, purples, and teals of her abstract figurative work. The composition captures both the intimate scale of the artist and the bold public statement of her commissioned piece, embodying Portland's thriving street art culture.
Artist Naomi Likayi poses in front of her mural commissioned by the Portland Street Art Alliance at the boarded World Trade Center.
Artist Before Her Portland Mural Commission
B
Illustrator Anke Gladnick works methodically on her vibrant mural "Let's Talk" outside Open Signal on Northeast Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard in Portland's historic Albina neighborhood. The artist crouches beside a red ladder, applying paint to the lower portion of her surreal composition featuring a figure with flowing blue hair holding a large teal camera or recording device. Paint containers and brushes are scattered across a makeshift table, while the afternoon light illuminates both the emerging artwork and the urban streetscape of this culturally significant corridor.
Artist Anke Gladnick works on her commissioned mural "Let's Talk" at Open Signal in Portland's Eliot neighborhood, part of a Regional Arts & Culture Council initiative.
Artist Creates Community Mural in Portland
C
A blue bicycle rests against weathered concrete beside vibrant murals adorning the former Oregon Theater on Southeast Division Street in Portland's Richmond neighborhood. The street art transforms the aging storefront with bold greens, pinks, and blues, while leafy trees filter soft daylight across the quiet sidewalk. The juxtaposition of urban decay and artistic renewal captures the evolving character of this historically industrial Portland corridor.
Street art breathes new life into the former Oregon Theater building on Southeast Division Street in Portland's Richmond district.
Mural Revival on Southeast Division Street
B
Mexican-American artist Maria Rodriguez, working under the name Sparkykneecap, kneels beside her vibrant mural titled 'Let's Talk' on the exterior wall of Open Signal in Portland's Eliot neighborhood. Wearing a navy and white striped shirt and headphones, she carefully applies paint to the lower portion of her colorful composition featuring abstract figures, stars, and geometric shapes in coral, teal, and golden yellow. A paint bucket sits nearby on the sidewalk as spring light filters through bare tree branches overhead.
Artist Maria Rodriguez works on her community-commissioned mural 'Let's Talk' at Open Signal in Portland's Eliot neighborhood.
Artist Creates Community Mural in Portland
C
Artist Anke Gladnick works on a vibrant community mural titled "Let's Talk" on the exterior wall of Open Signal in Portland's Eliot neighborhood. The colorful artwork depicts a figure with blue hair holding what appears to be a vintage camera or recording device, rendered in bright teals, yellows, and coral tones. A red stepladder stands against the wall as the artist adds finishing touches, while paint cans and supplies are organized on a nearby table, capturing the collaborative spirit of public art creation.
Illustrator Anke Gladnick applies paint to her community mural "Let's Talk" commissioned by the Regional Arts & Culture Council at Open Signal in Portland's Eliot neighborhood.
Mural Artist Creates Community Art in Portland
C
Two muralists work on the vibrant "Let's Talk" public art installation at Open Signal in Portland's Eliot neighborhood. One artist in a navy vest and hoodie stands contemplatively before the wall while another in a striped shirt and headphones actively paints the colorful geometric design. The mural features bold yellow molecular patterns, coral and teal geometric shapes, and dynamic blue elements against a white concrete wall, with an orange stepladder and paint supplies scattered across the concrete sidewalk.
Anke Gladnick and Maria Rodriguez collaborate on their commissioned "Let's Talk" mural at Open Signal in Northeast Portland, funded by the Regional Arts & Culture Council.
Artists Creating Community Mural in Portland
C

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