Minimalist photographer’s unexpected images of Hong Kong inspired by the late Michael Wolf
- In his new book ‘The Urban Text’, Detroit-born, Sydney-based photographer Jonathan Setter explores the normally unnoticed aspects of major cities
- Where others may favour wide shots of Hong Kong buildings, he zooms in on the colours and materials that shape them

While tourists and locals were taking wide-angle shots of the rainbow-coloured public housing blocks, Setter zoomed in on the monochrome, rough concrete surface of a staircase.
“Why aren’t you taking photos like everybody else?” a bystander asked, confused by what he was doing. Setter’s collection of images is the answer.
The 29-year-old, who was born in Detroit and is based in Sydney, Australia, skilfully extracts angles, lines, and textures and creates unexpected close-up views of cities. He uses his camera to explore urban spaces and the colours and materials that shape them.

“I capture the details people walk past daily,” he says. “I’m trying to get people to slow down, to take a closer look around them – even though these [urban] details might seem banal.”