Vertical Perspective of Hong Kong's Immense Skyscrapers

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This collection by Romain Jacquet-Lagreze will have your head spinning in a dizzy state of confusion. The French photographer and graphic artist created Vertical Horizon as a visual exploration of Hong Kong and it's rapid growth towards the sky. Using a unique perspective, Jacquet-Lagreze presents the ever-growing city in a repetitively graphic expression of its architecture.

The artist explains, "[The project] is a deep immersion into the city's thick atmospheres and a visual record of its wildly diverse built environment. This book is like a contemplative dive into the raw nature of Hong Kong and an expression of its vertical élan."

By eliminating people from his images, Jacquet-Lagreze has taken away the human qualities that normally define such a largely populated city and turned it into an abstract visual reality. The artist's bio explains that he uses his camera to illustrate his feelings about Hong Kong, inspired mainly by "the geometry of the urban environment and the vivid lives it shelters."

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If you love these photos, you can buy the photographer's 160-page hardcover book, called Vertical Horizon, that's filled with them, here.

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Katie Hosmer is a writer for MyModernMet, where this article originally appeared.