Walead Beshty. “Travel Picture (rose)” 2006. This image was taken and then passed through an x-ray machine, and the changes in the image show how time can affect photography and the photographs we take.
David Doubilet. “Sea Lion feeding on striped salmon” 1977. This image invokes how action and time pass underwater, and the magic/fantastical way we view underwater scenes, especially because time is a factor in the taking of photographs underwater where the photographer can only be for limited amounts of time.
Masashi Wakui. The images of the Tokyo nightcap are so beautiful and reminiscent of a specific place and time. This one especially with the rain drops makes time a central element in the action of the shot.
Andrew Whyte. “Ages” 2014. The long exposure of the night sky reminds the viewer of the moving stars and time zooming forwards through the night.
Gerald Gerbert. “APTOPIX Gulf Oil” 2010. This image deals with time in that the context of the oil spill was a specific point or event in time. The water and movement of the oil through it also invokes the viewer to think about time.
Ryan McGinley. “Big Leaf Maple” 2015. This image depicts time both in the changing and brief moment of fall within the seasons and most of McGinley’s work focuses on youth, which is evident in the young individual in this photograph.
Zoe Leonard. “453 West 17th Street” 2012. The active image of this installation was a photograph of the current time outside the room, constantly shifting through time.
Iwan Baan. “Editorio El B” The blurred movement of the figure moving down the stairs indicates time moving forwards, the everyday nature of the movement further solidifies the viewers expectations of time.
Jon Rafman. This artist takes screen caps of the Google earth feed, capturing moments of time as they happen and are recorded by Google.
An My Le. “This Long Century” This image captures the time passing in violence and war, clear in the movement and action of the image.