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Ascribing to the law that nature does not abide my human rule, Liz Beddall’s Perspective Collection encourages us to recognize that we as humans, subscribing to our eyes, what we see on earth is not necessarily built for us. Who is looking at it. They is art in nature that is breathtaking from every angle - and we have to look a little closer than we do. Open your mind. Even the mere question of ‘what are we looking at?’ means we are prejudiced in how we see things. Flipped on their side or upside down, nature shot exactly as it is found but askew. Is that its own boldness and ego that says we can also do that to the world through images and photography.

Liz also explores the concepts of femininity in her work - bringing a female perspective to a male-dominated industry, a trait that she feels has differentiated her as a photographer her entire life. The poor of the female perspective - on people, places - is beauty leaning. Creative leaning - understainding the beauty in things, to capture them a LITTLE bit more intimately than by adjusting your lens perfectly or the sharpest settings. You try to show it as you see - and show it at its best. Like in life, I’d like beauufyl nature to say to me ‘ive never looked better.’ and it’s really me.