
Lousiana I by Florent Bodart
The Louisiana Museum of Modern Art perches at the edge of the Oresund, and Bodart's first image in this series finds that borderline between building and landscape. Architectural forms — glass, concrete, timber — dissolve gently into the coastal horizon. The composition is horizontal and measured, with an almost Scandinavian economy of means: nothing clutters the frame, and the soft northern light unifies every element into a single sustained mood. It is photography that treats a building the way a portrait painter treats a face.
Printed as an archival fine art print, the restrained tonal palette of the Louisiana landscape is preserved with exceptional clarity — fine gradients and architectural lines rendered sharply on matte fine art paper.
The Louisiana Museum of Modern Art perches at the edge of the Oresund, and Bodart's first image in this series finds that borderline between building and landscape. Architectural forms — glass, concrete, timber — dissolve gently into the coastal horizon. The composition is horizontal and measured, with an almost Scandinavian economy of means: nothing clutters the frame, and the soft northern light unifies every element into a single sustained mood. It is photography that treats a building the way a portrait painter treats a face.
Printed as an archival fine art print, the restrained tonal palette of the Louisiana landscape is preserved with exceptional clarity — fine gradients and architectural lines rendered sharply on matte fine art paper.
Original: $25.59
-65%$25.59
$8.96Description
The Louisiana Museum of Modern Art perches at the edge of the Oresund, and Bodart's first image in this series finds that borderline between building and landscape. Architectural forms — glass, concrete, timber — dissolve gently into the coastal horizon. The composition is horizontal and measured, with an almost Scandinavian economy of means: nothing clutters the frame, and the soft northern light unifies every element into a single sustained mood. It is photography that treats a building the way a portrait painter treats a face.
Printed as an archival fine art print, the restrained tonal palette of the Louisiana landscape is preserved with exceptional clarity — fine gradients and architectural lines rendered sharply on matte fine art paper.























