Foley Objects: the Secrets Behind Cinema’s Sound Effects














Ciao! Your name?
Jonna Kina.
How old are you?
I am 31.
Where are your from?
I am from Finland.
What is photography?
Photography for me is not only a tool but also an approach to see the pictures that are not yet there. I am more interested in creating works in series rather than producing single images. Also, the entire process and collaborations that working with photography entails are important for me, and affect the final work.
What is Foley Objects about?
In the photography series Foley Objects, I play with viewers’ expectations and with the conceptual delimitations of the photographic medium. The words below the images refer to the sound generated by the portrayed objects: the Foley technique consists in the reproduction of sound effects, which are added in postproduction to enhance the audio experience of films. The connection of the two, image and text, is in a sense arbitrary and surreal, but also strictly documentary in its approach. This collection of images could be seen as an archive of sounds as well as a twist between documentation and absurd playfulness.
Where can you be found online?
This is my site.
Keep looking...

Cody Cobb’s Otherworldly Landscape Photos Are a Representation of His State of Mind

Bryan Thomas Takes Moving Portraits of People Wearing Memorial T-Shirts

‘The Blindest Man’ by Emily Graham Is Inspired by a Treasure Hunt for a Hidden Sculpture

Bird of Dreams — Fergus Thomas Photographs a Group of Men with a Passion for Pigeon Racing

FotoFirst — George Voronov Photographs Young People at Religious and Spiritual Retreats

Folly — Jamie E Murray Makes Work Inspired by Conversations with Ex-Prisoners

Niklas Grapatin Turns the Dust in Dhaka’s Air into Magic
