ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 3月22日 21時54分
In the middle of a 4-decade career as a photographer and filmmaker, Max Aguilera-Hellweg (@xfilm7) decided to go to medical school. He photographed hundreds of surgeries before beginning to make portraits of #robots. “When I photographed surgeries I would ask, ‘What does it mean to be human?’” @xfilm7 told @104bx of the @ニューヨーク・タイムズ #Lensblog. He found himself in the same place while photographing “these pieces of metal and rubber.” His subjects range from skeletal humanoids — used as stand-ins for humans in dangerous settings — to geminoids that resemble a specific person. He didn’t end up practicing medicine, but his knowledge of #anatomy made him well-suited to photographing robots. He approached them as if he were in a portrait session, spending hours to try to reveal what exactly about them resembled humans. “I would spend a day just to take one picture to get that exact angle where there is one bit of life,” he said. “Where I could say ‘Yes, I’ve seen that gesture before. That is human.’” Swipe left to see more photos by @xfilm7 of @instituteartist, and visit the link in our profile to read more.
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