Tim Trautmann / Archive
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493 photographs, licensable by the hour or the century.

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Showing results for "Navy Blue"

Golden hour light bathes a vibrant graffiti-covered food truck parked along Kent Avenue in Brooklyn's Navy Yard district, its weathered white surface transformed by bold blues, yellows, and greens depicting stylized figures and tags. A young woman on a bicycle pauses beside the mobile canvas, her figure casting long shadows across the asphalt as industrial shipping containers stack in the soft-focused background. The scene captures the raw creative energy of Brooklyn's waterfront, where street art culture intersects with everyday urban life.
A cyclist encounters a graffiti-adorned food truck bathed in warm evening light along Kent Avenue in Brooklyn's Navy Yard district.
Street Art Meets Urban Cycling Brooklyn Navy Yard
C
A large luxury superyacht with a deep navy blue hull, red waterline stripe, and white superstructure is moored at a pier along the Manhattan waterfront, photographed from across the East River in Brooklyn. The vessel's name appears to read "Sycara V" on the hull. Behind the yacht, rusted industrial pier infrastructure and a large grey waterfront building line the shore. Rising above are multiple massive brown brick mid-rise residential housing towers characteristic of Lower East Side public housing complexes. A colorful rooftop mural bearing the number "275" is visible on one of the shorter buildings at left. The sky is clear and hazy blue, with a single small cloud. The contrast between the opulent private yacht and the dense public housing towers behind it is stark.
A superyacht sits moored along the Manhattan waterfront as seen from Brooklyn across the East River, its gleaming white superstructure and navy hull set against the brick towers of Lower East Side housing complexes — an unfiltered study in contrasts along one of the world's most storied waterfronts.
Contrast on the East River
A
Two activists position handmade protest signs along the concrete barrier of the North Skidmore Street overpass in Portland, their messages visible to Interstate 5 traffic below. One demonstrator in a bright yellow shirt raises their arm toward passing vehicles, while their companion in navy blue secures additional signage. The scene unfolds against spring foliage with an American flag prominently displayed alongside calls for civic engagement, creating a tableau of grassroots political expression in urban Oregon.
Indivisible movement activists conduct a banner drop from the North Skidmore Street overpass in Portland, promoting awareness for a May 1st General Strike to Interstate 5 motorists.
Activists Display Banners Over Interstate Portland
C
Anke Gladnick and Maria Rodriguez collaborate on a vibrant public mural titled "Let's Talk" at Open Signal in Portland's Eliot neighborhood. The standing artist in navy vest works alongside a seated partner wearing headphones and striped shirt, their brushes bringing bold geometric patterns to life against a white wall. Paint cans and a wooden ladder frame the scene as the duo transforms the community space with radiating circles and angular forms in coral, blue, and golden yellow.
Artists Anke Gladnick and Maria Rodriguez create the public mural "Let's Talk" commissioned by the Regional Arts & Culture Council at Open Signal in Portland, Oregon.
Artists Paint Community Mural in Portland
C
Two muralists collaborate on 'Let's Talk,' a vibrant community artwork at Open Signal in Portland's historic Eliot neighborhood. One artist, wearing a navy vest and jeans, observes the geometric yellow network pattern while their colleague in a blue striped shirt sits cross-legged on the concrete, headphones on, painting flowing blue and coral forms. An orange stepladder stands ready against the white brick wall, paint cans scattered nearby as the mural takes shape under natural daylight.
Anke Gladnick and Maria Rodriguez work on their commissioned public mural 'Let's Talk' at Open Signal in Portland, Oregon.
Artists Creating Community Mural 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
Two muralists work collaboratively on an expansive public art installation at Open Signal in Portland's Eliot neighborhood. One artist balances on a red ladder while adding delicate yellow constellation-like details to the vibrant composition, while another works at ground level on the lower portion of the wall. The mural features bold geometric forms in coral, turquoise, and navy blue, interwoven with red stars and connecting golden lines that create a sense of cosmic unity across the white concrete block surface.
Artists Anke Gladnick and Maria Rodriguez collaborate on the 'Let's Talk' mural commissioned by the Regional Arts & Culture Council at Open Signal in Portland, Oregon.
Artists Create Community Mural in Portland
C
Mexican-American artist Maria Rodriguez, known as Sparkykneecap, kneels on the sidewalk while painting vibrant details on a colorful mural titled "Let's Talk" outside Open Signal in Portland's Eliot neighborhood. The artist, wearing a blue and white striped shirt, carefully applies paint to the geometric composition featuring turquoise, yellow, coral, and navy blue shapes against the white corrugated metal wall. A paint bucket sits nearby on the concrete as bare trees frame the community art project on Northeast Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard.
Artist Maria Rodriguez (Sparkykneecap) works on the "Let's Talk" mural commissioned by the Regional Arts & Culture Council at Open Signal in Portland's Eliot neighborhood.
Artist Creates Community Mural in Portland
C

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