Video: Lions, eagles and partridges: wildlife photos of Syukha Derbent
2024 Author: Richard Flannagan | [email protected]. Last modified: 2023-12-15 23:55
Turkish photographer Syuha Derbent is, one might say, a professional traveler. An impressive list of 60 visited countries plus 20 years behind the lens - this is the secret of the master's original photographs. Syukha Derbent mainly takes photos of wildlife, but does not disdain landscape sketches either. The goal of his travels was to film 7 large felines. In the meantime, the photographer was chasing lions and jaguars, his portfolio was replenished with many portraits of smaller animals.
Suha Derbent is a welcome guest on the editorial boards of illustrated travel magazines. The fact is that he always has something new and interesting in his bins. The travel geography of the wandering photographer is extremely wide: from Scandinavia to Madagascar and from Canada to Sri Lanka. From each trip, he brings more than a dozen successful shots.
Syukha Derbent is interested in the habits of large wild cats, which is reflected even in his nickname - Catman. His dream to shoot all 7 sought-after views has already come true. The wildlife photo shows a lion, a leopard, a cheetah, a tiger, a puma, a jaguar, and a snow leopard.
Although it is not limited to wild cats only. So, for example, 4 years ago Syuha Derbent went to photograph mountain gorillas in Congo together with the expedition of the World Wildlife Fund. And then he donated to the organization all the photographs of animals that are under threat of extinction taken during the campaign.
Numerous wildlife photos taken by the master formed the basis of the illustrated book "Face to Face" (it was published 9 years ago) - an impressive photo report about encounters with amazing animals and travels in beautiful countryside.
Recommended:
British Wildlife Photography Competition Amazing Wildlife Photography
Not every person dares to meet a wild beast face to face. Sharp teeth and claws, standing on end fur and scary, bloodshot eyes - basically people see animals that way. But we rarely remember how beautiful they are in their natural habitat. The British Wildlife Photography Award is dedicated to live photographs of real life of animals
Wild African lions in the New Zealand Wildlife Sanctuary: an inside view
Photographer Chris McLennan has always been interested in seeing how predators live in reserves. Moreover, to see this not from the window of an impregnable jeep, when the animals scatter in fear, but at the moment when the pets are not even aware of the invasion. This dream was realized with the help of a Nikon D800E camera mounted in a radio-controlled car
Father and son paint wild animals: lions, bears, wolves and other animals on the canvases of animal painters
The world of wild nature is mysterious and unique, and we know about it only thanks to the painstaking work of its researchers. Father and son Montana animal artists, Daniel and Adam Smith, also contribute to the wild animals that live in the wild. Their art carries not only artistic value, but also raises topical environmental issues
Animal parades in Great Britain: elephants, lions, rhinos and toads
In May of this year, we wrote about the "elephant occupation" that befell London. As it turned out, this was just the beginning. Aligning with their capital, other British cities, one after another, began to hold "animal parades": to date, London's initiative has already been taken up by Chester, Bath and Kingston-upon-Hull
Wildlife at the largest photography contest Veolia Environnement Wildlife Photographer-2012
Polish satirist Tadeusz Gitsger wondered why animal footprints please us more than human footprints? For the participants of the annual Veolia Environnement Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition, nature is their home, and animals are the best "models". This year 48 thousand photographers from 98 countries of the world presented their works to the international jury