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Architecture and design
LifestyleArts

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

Reading Time:3 minutes
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Photographer Jon Setter’s new book, The Urban Text, features minimalist urban images of Hong Kong and other cities. Photo: Leon Chen
Petra Loho
When Jonathan Setter visited Hong Kong last year for the first time, a trip to the Instagram-famous Choi Hung Estate was part of the itinerary.

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.

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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.

Star Ferry Wharf in Central, Hong Kong. Photo: Jon Setter
Star Ferry Wharf in Central, Hong Kong. Photo: Jon Setter
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“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.”

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