PLACES — Thresholds, color, and atmosphere worldwide
TEAL TARGETS
PINK CORNER
BLUE ALTAR
GARDEN BENCH
MIDNIGHT BLOOMS
HIDDEN VENUS
PRIZE WALL
FAIRGROUND SKYWAY
LANTERN CANOPY
STONEWALL LAUNDRY
DUSK TENEMENTS
FLEUR SHADOWS
BLUE VERANDA
BRIDGE DOOR
RED ROCK PORTAL
SEA FRAME
TUNNEL EXIT
WINDOW WALKER
OCHRE THRESHOLD
WHITE COURT
EMPTY PLAYSET
SUNSET SWINGS
RAINBOW RAILING
RAIN COURT
GLASS BLOCK STRIDE
WATERLINE TABLES
NUTCRACKER ENTRY
EMERALD ALLEY
STAR SHADOW
DMZ
SUNLIT THRONE
LOTUS GATE
ADVENT CORNER
SHADOW STAIRS
DOORSTEP VISIT
MINT FACADE
COLORBLOCK TOWERS
SHUTTERED MANOR
BAMBOO WINDOW
LACE WINDOW
VINE GATE
OCHRE SHUTTERS
RAINBOW UMBRELLA
YELLOW HOUSE
Tim Klein’s Places collection gathers architectural fragments, civic corners, and quietly charged thresholds from varied geographies, moving from the Korean DMZ’s green perimeter to fortress doors, temple gates, harbor streets, and pastel facades. Across the photographs, windows, courtyards, alleys, railings, swings, umbrellas, bridges, and storefronts become recurring visual anchors, while details like laundry lines, lantern canopies, shutters, arches, and weathered walls create texture and rhythm.
The mood shifts between playful, solitary, ceremonial, and cinematic: a fairground skyway, a sunset swing set, a rain-washed court, a doorway passerby, and hushed interior glimpses all suggest human presence even when no figure is centered. As a group, the images trend toward thresholds and edges—entries, exits, frames, and perimeters—turning everyday places into portraits of atmosphere, color, and spatial memory.
Bright color pairings and repeated geometric forms connect distant locations, so tenements, courtyards, balconies, and roadside structures feel part of one visual language, balancing documentary specificity with design-forward composition and emotional restraint throughout the page.