- Exclusive offers
- Inspiring new releases
- Personal invitations to Art Events
Efren Isaza
A master of artistic styles Graceful female figures lounge in fashionable poses. Paper costumes that seem borrowed from Oskar Schlemmer’s triadic ballet make the ballerinas look like… Read more
Intro Video
Haute Couture beige dress
Haute Couture
from $ 1,690
Haute Couture beige dress
Haute Couture
from $ 1,690
With Yves coat I
Haute Couture
$ 2,290
With Yves coat I
Haute Couture
$ 2,290
With Yves coat II
Haute Couture
$ 2,290
With Yves coat II
Haute Couture
$ 2,290
Black Rosa
Haute Couture
from $ 950
Black Rosa
Haute Couture
from $ 950
Black Girl in Origami dress with rooster
Origami I
from $ 1,690
Black Girl in Origami dress with rooster
Origami I
from $ 1,690
Teresa in Black Origami
Origami I
from $ 1,490
Teresa in Black Origami
Origami I
from $ 1,490
Teresa staring
Origami I
from $ 950
Teresa staring
Origami I
from $ 950
Black Frida with Monkeys
Frida Kahlo
from $ 849
Black Frida with Monkeys
Frida Kahlo
from $ 849
Frida with Monkey
Frida Kahlo
from $ 799
Frida with Monkey
Frida Kahlo
from $ 799
Black Frida with Blue Macaws
Frida Kahlo
from $ 799
Black Frida with Blue Macaws
Frida Kahlo
from $ 799
Blonde Frida with Red Shawl
Frida Kahlo
from $ 799
Blonde Frida with Red Shawl
Frida Kahlo
from $ 799
Frida with crows
Frida Kahlo
from $ 950
Frida with crows
Frida Kahlo
from $ 950
Frida with Arum Lilies
Frida Kahlo
from $ 749
Frida with Arum Lilies
Frida Kahlo
from $ 749
Frida's Pain
PETITES
$ 269
Frida's Pain
PETITES
$ 269
Background Information about Efren Isaza
Introduction
A master of artistic styles
Graceful female figures lounge in fashionable poses. Paper costumes that seem borrowed from Oskar Schlemmer’s triadic ballet make the ballerinas look like marionettes. Their dislocation recalls the puppets Hans Bellmer featured in his surreal photographic experiments. Frida Kahlo’s face with her dark, furrowed eyebrows, peers at the viewer out of different scenes; her hair is knotted artfully on her head.
The allusions evoked in the imaginative creations of Colombian fashion photographer Efren Isaza are diverse: he cites and alienates an arsenal of styles before melding them into new compositions. It might be a certain scene, a poem, a petal of a flower, or the idea of a person that inspires a new work. His passion for breaking the boundaries of traditional fashion photography is palpable in each of Isaza’s works. He is less concerned with fashion than with the image – the play of contrasts – and the magic and emotions – sometimes saturnine, sometimes buoyant, sometimes surreal, and yet always beguiling – that the image transports.
Isaza, one of Colombia’s most influential fashion photographers, initially studied fashion design. He united his interest in fashion with one of his earliest passions: photography. He began taking portraits and landscapes with his small-format camera at the age of sixteen; later, an autodidact, he fine-tuned his techniques and made a splash in Europe. Back in Colombia he worked for renowned fashion magazines, but that was not enough for a creative spirit like Isaza. From the puzzle pieces of his imagination he has now created completely new and unique compositions whose entrancing effects often blur the boundary between photography and painting.
Graceful female figures lounge in fashionable poses. Paper costumes that seem borrowed from Oskar Schlemmer’s triadic ballet make the ballerinas look like marionettes. Their dislocation recalls the puppets Hans Bellmer featured in his surreal photographic experiments. Frida Kahlo’s face with her dark, furrowed eyebrows, peers at the viewer out of different scenes; her hair is knotted artfully on her head.
The allusions evoked in the imaginative creations of Colombian fashion photographer Efren Isaza are diverse: he cites and alienates an arsenal of styles before melding them into new compositions. It might be a certain scene, a poem, a petal of a flower, or the idea of a person that inspires a new work. His passion for breaking the boundaries of traditional fashion photography is palpable in each of Isaza’s works. He is less concerned with fashion than with the image – the play of contrasts – and the magic and emotions – sometimes saturnine, sometimes buoyant, sometimes surreal, and yet always beguiling – that the image transports.
Isaza, one of Colombia’s most influential fashion photographers, initially studied fashion design. He united his interest in fashion with one of his earliest passions: photography. He began taking portraits and landscapes with his small-format camera at the age of sixteen; later, an autodidact, he fine-tuned his techniques and made a splash in Europe. Back in Colombia he worked for renowned fashion magazines, but that was not enough for a creative spirit like Isaza. From the puzzle pieces of his imagination he has now created completely new and unique compositions whose entrancing effects often blur the boundary between photography and painting.
You may also like these artists