Artist David Drebin
Photographer David Drebin is a multidisciplinary artist who creates limited edition artworks that combine photography with lightboxes, neon light installations, and diamond dust.
Who is david drebin?
David Drebin is a globally renown multidisciplinary artist who is famous for creating captivating photographs which Drebin transforms through various artistic interventions.
After graduating from Parsons School of Design in New York City, David became involved in commercial photography which sparked his preoccupation with innovating photography by combining the photographic method with other forms of art media.
Initially, the American-Canadian photographer, David Drebin, became famous for his photographic portraits of celebrity culture. In fact, his photograph editorials were published in magazines such as Rolling Stone and Vanity Fair.
"Drebins"
Working with photographs, lightboxes, neon light installations, diamond dust pieces, and other art forms, David Drebin's artistic journey took off after his 2005 solo exhibition at Camera Work in Berlin, Germany. Afterwards, Drebin's illustrated book, Love and Other Stories, was released in 2007. Since then, David Drebin has been represented by some of the finest galleries across the globe.
Drebin's vision is distinctive and immediately recognizable. He has become known for his epic, dramatic, and cinematic, artistic style, that blends together voyeuristic and psychological viewpoints. In visualizing themes such as sex and solitude, David Drebin's art offer viewers a dramatic insight into the emotions and experiences of the human condition.
Over the years, artist David Drebin has published seven books with teNeues publishing, including The Morning After, Beautiful Disasters, Chasing Paradise, Dreamscapes, Love and Lights, Before They Were Famous, and the most recent Collectors Edition.
Based in New York City, David Drebin continues to create surreal images and captivating artworks that celebrate femininity and embody the figure of the femme fatale. His works have become referred to as "Drebins."