Dwight Pinkley Art Collections
Shop for artwork from Dwight Pinkley based on themed collections. Each image may be purchased as a canvas print, framed print, metal print, and more! Every purchase comes with a 30-day money-back guarantee.
Artwork by Dwight Pinkley
Each image may be purchased as a canvas print, framed print, metal print, and more! Every purchase comes with a 30-day money-back guarantee.
Morgan Plus 8 by Dwight Pinkley
Middleburg Bench by Dwight Pinkley
The Road to Matterhorn by Dwight Pinkley
Byzantine Angel by Dwight Pinkley
Motion Madness by Dwight Pinkley
Sion Lamp Post by Dwight Pinkley
Il Duomo Firenze by Dwight Pinkley
Basilica of San Vitale by Dwight Pinkley
Berries on Ice by Dwight Pinkley
Stray Beauty in Autumn No 4 by Dwight Pinkley
Foggy Fall by Dwight Pinkley
Bench with a Fab View by Dwight Pinkley
Momentary Beauty by Dwight Pinkley
Saint Michel in the Clouds by Dwight Pinkley
Late Night Calm and Quiet in Venice by Dwight Pinkley
Early Calm Colors by Dwight Pinkley
Bratislava Facade by Dwight Pinkley
Newcastle Chairs Side by Dwight Pinkley
Gondelier Standing By by Dwight Pinkley
Rockets Red Glare by Dwight Pinkley
Fallen Bench by Dwight Pinkley
Last Glimpse of Autumn by Dwight Pinkley
Verdon Torrent by Dwight Pinkley
Tree Muscles by Dwight Pinkley
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About Dwight Pinkley
Among other things I am an avid photographer of the world around us. Once for a Smithsonian initiative (Click), I shared some photos and some related philosophy about photography, which I've excerpted below:
Most of us go through life, moving from place to place, changing our point in space, in order to complete some task, reach some goal, or simply pass the time. But what remains in our minds eye, what we are conscious of, is only a sensation of where we have been or where we are. Sometimes we remember the journey too, but again, only as a blur.
Taking pictures is about recording something we are looking at. Photography is when we capture something special we see. After you compose your first photograph, having looked and looked at the same thing, from different angles and in different light, closer or farther, higher or lower, something wonderful happens to how you see the world.
You no longer walk or drive from place to place daydreaming along the way. Now every person or thing along your path, near and far, become objects of scrutiny, your mind calculating the best angle and the best light, the just right perspective, to capture something unique or to tell a story. You are bombarded with macro and micro images, and you find yourself looking at shiny surfaces for reflections, or shadows, or the patterns of the bricks in the road, or the roof top facades of houses along the streets. Shiny leaves blown against a fence after a storm fascinate you, and the backs of statue’s heads are just as interesting to you as their faces.