Images to Inspire

About Joyce
I started taking photos a long time ago as a child with a hand me down old Kodak camera that took a 125 film cartridge. At first it was simply a means to record events, places and people, but now I find excitement in trekking, usually by bicycle, through cities, small towns, rural communities, abandoned industrial sites and old buildings. I absorb the sights, sounds, smells and lighting of new places and try to capture their essence and communicate something of their majesty, mystery, memory, and drama. For me photography is a way to share the excitement and beauty of the world and express my own unique view of it. It's an art and a powerful communicator.
Inspirational Collections
Inspiration for living your best life in each photo.  Soulful, expressive art for collectors and modern spaces”

Artistic Prints

Documenting landscapes, and structures with an artist's touch for inspiration and a poet's heart. Offering high-quality prints of my artistic photography for display, inspiration, and enjoyment in your spaces. https://www.artpal.com/joycewasser Sale links for individual photos are in the photo descriptions. "Mists of Time "Limited Edition Print is not in the Art Pal Gallery, but has a link to my Limited Editions Store.

03Nov

There’s a certain poetry in rust, rot and decay. For me beauty is not polished glass towers or freshly paved streets, but in the crumbling brick, forgotten rail lines, and faded paint of places that time and nature have tried to erase. Urban decay becomes a museum without walls. Every crack, every peeling layer of paint and the crumbling concrete becomes a story, a reminder that a city’s soul isn’t only in its growth, but in its history and its scars.Industrial landscapes hold a raw honesty, smokestacks against gray skies, abandoned factories with broken windows, steel beams twisting into the sky. These aren’t relics to be ignored. They’re monuments to labor, innovation, and the people who built the world we now take for granted. To wander through them is to feel the weight of history, to trace the fingerprints of lives lived and work done.The fascination here isn’t morbid; it’s reverent. It’s an act of preserving memory, of seeing value where others see waste. In the rust, in the rubble, in the echoes of machinery long silent. There is truth, and there is beauty.

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