Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 9

Etienne Labbe
Farmland Afternoon V2 - contemporary, abstract landscape, photography on dibond

2015

About the Item

A flat strip of golden brown and green land dotted with outbuildings below a vast, cloudy sky captures the essence of the Canadian prairies. This landscape was created using time lapse photography while the photographer was in motion. Labbe's large format photos are printed on archival paper, mounted on dibond (an aluminum composite panel) and faced cleanly with plexiglass. A stainless steel channel is mounted to the work on the back for easy installation. Each print is unique. Labbe only makes 3 variations (cropped in different proportion) from each photograph. Québec born Etienne Labbé trained as a molecular biologist in Montréal and Toronto. As an artist he has worked in several mediums – sculpture, watercolour, mixed media and photography. His work consists of rapidly shifting explorations of scale, colour, light and mood. Movement is used as a creative and transformative force by which ordinary landscapes are altered. Labbé’s work is held in several private collections across Canada.
More From This SellerView All
  • Misty Harbour - contemporary, abstracted landscape, photography on dibond
    By Etienne Labbe
    Located in Bloomfield, ON
    In this unique photographic print, Etienne Labbé has captured the subtle variation in a moody gray-blue sky above a mist-covered harbour. His beautiful compositions experiment with t...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Landscape Photography

    Materials

    Steel

  • Highway - abstract juxtaposition photograph with dream-like elements
    By Mark Bartkiw
    Located in Bloomfield, ON
    A line of fiery orange splits a dark road in two in this dramatic image by Mark Bartkiw. The sun sets on the horizon. This C-print is sealed between dibond and plexiglass. This work...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Landscape Photography

    Materials

    Metal

  • Found - yellow, red, abstract figurative, surrealist, photography on dibond
    By Mark Bartkiw
    Located in Bloomfield, ON
    Helicopters hover over a lone figure stands on a scorched ground in this dramatic photo based image by Mark Bartkiw. The artist disrupts the landscape by juxtaposing expected element...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Landscape Photography

    Materials

    Plexiglass, C Print

  • Last Resort - white, blue, abstract landscape, photography on dibond
    By Mark Bartkiw
    Located in Bloomfield, ON
    This compelling contemporary photograph of a seaside landscape is by Mark Bartkiw. A single white cloud in a pale blue sky appears to float above an ocean of white sand. The image is...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Landscape Photography

    Materials

    Plexiglass, C Print

  • Sanctuary - beach, trees, people, abstract, manipulated, photograph on dibond
    By Mark Bartkiw
    Located in Bloomfield, ON
    At first glance, Mark Bartkiw’s artwork looks like another beautiful photograph. Look again and you’ll see a clever collage of images that creates an almost magical, ethereal landsca...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Landscape Photography

    Materials

    Plexiglass, C Print

  • Lakeshore - white, blue, beach, abstract, manipulated, photograph on dibond
    By Mark Bartkiw
    Located in Bloomfield, ON
    A moody sky looms large over turquoise waters and a bright white shore. Mark Bartkiw’s mesmerizing ethereal photographs play with our perception of reality by slightly distorting ima...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Landscape Photography

    Materials

    Plexiglass, C Print

You May Also Like
  • Seascape I Diptych (framed) - abstract photograph of water color cloud horizon
    By Frank Schott
    Located in San Francisco, CA
    SEASCAPE I Diptych ( framed ) by Frank Schott from a series of photographic works capturing the sea blue color palette of the ocean 2 Panels 86.75 x 58 inches / 220.35cm x 147.3cm ...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Landscape Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Paper, Archival Pigment, Plexiglass, Archival Paper, Giclée

  • Renaissance - Revival 12
    By Paul-Émile Rioux
    Located in Miami, FL
    Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Dimensions: 48 x 48 in. Depth: 1/4 in. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutti...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Color Photography

    Materials

    Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

  • Renaissance - Revival 14
    By Paul-Émile Rioux
    Located in Miami, FL
    Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Dimensions: 48 x 48 in. Depth: 1/4 in. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutti...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Color Photography

    Materials

    Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

  • Renaissance - Revival 15
    By Paul-Émile Rioux
    Located in Miami, FL
    Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Dimensions: 48 x 48 in. Depth: 1/4 in. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutting-edge media technology as well as his expertise in photography cast him as pioneer in digital art and allow him to develop virtual matrix from which he extracts his images. In his works he explores a universe that lies at the crossroad of abstraction and the figurative, inviting the viewer to determine if what he sees is a reflection of reality or imagination. Through is truly unique approach RIOUX is one of the most innovative artists in digital creations and one of the few creative minds able to blend with such keenness aesthetics research and critical distance. Whether they translate into a Dantesque urbanity or the infinite horizon of a turquoise ocean, the urban territory reflected by his creations offers a dystopian view of the world, challenging our attitude towards the environment and the future. From the onset, RIOUX has no intention of matching IRL expectations of what digital art 'should' look like, but strives to play with our notions of what's real, what's not, how we remember, and how we infer meaning into imaginary visual constructs. --- RIOUX started the Renaissance project in 2016. Renaissance further develops themes explored by RIOUX in his earlier series Turquoise Default. It is not merely a progression however, but also a contrast. This new series poses questions about hope, which is perhaps now more relevant than ever. “Renaissance invokes in us a sense of uncertainty and a self-awareness of our limits, of an infinity made apparent by the horizon line, the vanishing point, the moment in any spatial or temporal projection beyond which we can no longer see, but from which, nonetheless, we know the universe carries on. At the same time it poses a choice to us: do we accept the openness of abstraction or do we insist on imposing a (false) certainty of representation in what we see in these images. Hope is a faith made possible by uncertainty and the unknown, by an understanding that history and the future are creative acts, works of art in which we all participate.” Neal Rockwell There are 18 pieces in the RENAISSANCE collection. Each archival pigment print is produced under the supervision of the artist. The print is mounted under a single piece of 1/4"/ 6 mm gallery...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Color Photography

    Materials

    Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

  • Renaissance - Revival 17
    By Paul-Émile Rioux
    Located in Miami, FL
    Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Dimensions: 48 x 48 in. Depth: 1/4 in. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutting-edge media technology as well as his expertise in photography cast him as pioneer in digital art and allow him to develop virtual matrix from which he extracts his images. In his works he explores a universe that lies at the crossroad of abstraction and the figurative, inviting the viewer to determine if what he sees is a reflection of reality or imagination. Through is truly unique approach RIOUX is one of the most innovative artists in digital creations and one of the few creative minds able to blend with such keenness aesthetics research and critical distance. Whether they translate into a Dantesque urbanity or the infinite horizon of a turquoise ocean, the urban territory reflected by his creations offers a dystopian view of the world, challenging our attitude towards the environment and the future. From the onset, RIOUX has no intention of matching IRL expectations of what digital art 'should' look like, but strives to play with our notions of what's real, what's not, how we remember, and how we infer meaning into imaginary visual constructs. --- RIOUX started the Renaissance project in 2016. Renaissance further develops themes explored by RIOUX in his earlier series Turquoise Default. It is not merely a progression however, but also a contrast. This new series poses questions about hope, which is perhaps now more relevant than ever. “Renaissance invokes in us a sense of uncertainty and a self-awareness of our limits, of an infinity made apparent by the horizon line, the vanishing point, the moment in any spatial or temporal projection beyond which we can no longer see, but from which, nonetheless, we know the universe carries on. At the same time it poses a choice to us: do we accept the openness of abstraction or do we insist on imposing a (false) certainty of representation in what we see in these images. Hope is a faith made possible by uncertainty and the unknown, by an understanding that history and the future are creative acts, works of art in which we all participate.” Neal Rockwell There are 18 pieces in the RENAISSANCE collection. Each archival pigment print is produced under the supervision of the artist. The print is mounted under a single piece of 1/4"/ 6 mm gallery...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Color Photography

    Materials

    Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

  • Renaissance - Revival 16
    By Paul-Émile Rioux
    Located in Miami, FL
    Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Dimensions: 48 x 48 in. Depth: 1/4 in. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutting-edge media technology as well as his expertise in photography cast him as pioneer in digital art and allow him to develop virtual matrix from which he extracts his images. In his works he explores a universe that lies at the crossroad of abstraction and the figurative, inviting the viewer to determine if what he sees is a reflection of reality or imagination. Through is truly unique approach RIOUX is one of the most innovative artists in digital creations and one of the few creative minds able to blend with such keenness aesthetics research and critical distance. Whether they translate into a Dantesque urbanity or the infinite horizon of a turquoise ocean, the urban territory reflected by his creations offers a dystopian view of the world, challenging our attitude towards the environment and the future. From the onset, RIOUX has no intention of matching IRL expectations of what digital art 'should' look like, but strives to play with our notions of what's real, what's not, how we remember, and how we infer meaning into imaginary visual constructs. --- RIOUX started the Renaissance project in 2016. Renaissance further develops themes explored by RIOUX in his earlier series Turquoise Default. It is not merely a progression however, but also a contrast. This new series poses questions about hope, which is perhaps now more relevant than ever. “Renaissance invokes in us a sense of uncertainty and a self-awareness of our limits, of an infinity made apparent by the horizon line, the vanishing point, the moment in any spatial or temporal projection beyond which we can no longer see, but from which, nonetheless, we know the universe carries on. At the same time it poses a choice to us: do we accept the openness of abstraction or do we insist on imposing a (false) certainty of representation in what we see in these images. Hope is a faith made possible by uncertainty and the unknown, by an understanding that history and the future are creative acts, works of art in which we all participate.” Neal Rockwell There are 18 pieces in the RENAISSANCE collection. Each archival pigment print is produced under the supervision of the artist. The print is mounted under a single piece of 1/4"/ 6 mm gallery...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Color Photography

    Materials

    Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Recently Viewed

View All