Maartje Roos

Maartje Roos

Maartje Roos (1986), doesn’t take pictures, she creates images.

Her narrative images are all manifestations of creating her own reality. This makes her demand the utmost of her creativity. An image always starts with a picture in her head. That picture will be transferred into a photo. This is not only a matter of quickly taking a photo; it is a long term process in which she is in charge of everything. Research, location, models, clothing, lighting, shooting and editing are all part of the process. She creates one photo out of multiple photos, using the digital palette and her ability to empathize. She adds and omits, balancing on directing, registering and composing a photo. In the end all that remains is her image. An intens and very detailed image of what once might have been.

Reality and fantasy.

Her work seems to be the photographic answer to the painting of the Old Masters, in which identity, nature and history are recurring subjects.

A painter can keep on painting, for example a landscape, to reality but can also add or omit parts. This determines the meaning and composition of the painting, or in this case the photo image of Maartje. Composing various picture elements (she always arrange, photograph and edit everything by her self) Maartje Roos can put a unique work and tell her own story.
Her images are all small quests for the connection between present and past and for the influence of that past on the present time. She determines how certain people, buildings, and other things looked like in their heyday and asks herself what effect it has had on the world of today.

“I want to take the viewer into my world, my passion, fascination and stories and I hope that people consciously or unconsciously get something, a feeling, a message or recognition from my images and stand still, look and dream away.”

Waterscape stories

Landscape stories

Historic stories

Historic animals