Aaron Alan Mitchell
Photographer and Filmmaker
DM for bookings

The present is to live or to lose: In conversation with movement director and former ballet dancer Pascal Johnson
I recently had the pleasure of collaborating with Pascal Johnson, @pascaljohnson a former dancer with the Dutch National Ballet, now a movement director and producer who has worked for brands like Apple, Calvin Klein, and Nike, on a photo series that grew into something deeper. What started as a visual exploration turned into a dialogue about presence, memory, and what exactly an image can and cannot truly hold. Together, we approached the process as an open-ended reflection, using movement and stillness through the visual medium of photography to investigate how the body carries memory and inhabits the present.
At the heart of this series is a complicated question: can we ever really preserve something fleeting? We often believe that by permanently affixing a body into image that we are holding on to something true. But permanence does not equal meaning. Time strips away context, and leaves behind a thin surface, a static impression of a figure that once moved with thought, fear, laughter, and love. What is left is a fossil of ego, a trace of something that was never meant to be still.
Read full story @c41magazine
Words: Aaron Alan Mitchell & Pascal Johnson
Photography: Aaron Alan Mitchell @aaronalanmitchell
Performer: Pascal Johnson @pascaljohnson
Styling: Uliana Milodan @milodya
Skirts: Britt Liberg @skirts_by_britt_liberg

The present is to live or to lose: In conversation with movement director and former ballet dancer Pascal Johnson
I recently had the pleasure of collaborating with Pascal Johnson, @pascaljohnson a former dancer with the Dutch National Ballet, now a movement director and producer who has worked for brands like Apple, Calvin Klein, and Nike, on a photo series that grew into something deeper. What started as a visual exploration turned into a dialogue about presence, memory, and what exactly an image can and cannot truly hold. Together, we approached the process as an open-ended reflection, using movement and stillness through the visual medium of photography to investigate how the body carries memory and inhabits the present.
At the heart of this series is a complicated question: can we ever really preserve something fleeting? We often believe that by permanently affixing a body into image that we are holding on to something true. But permanence does not equal meaning. Time strips away context, and leaves behind a thin surface, a static impression of a figure that once moved with thought, fear, laughter, and love. What is left is a fossil of ego, a trace of something that was never meant to be still.
Read full story @c41magazine
Words: Aaron Alan Mitchell & Pascal Johnson
Photography: Aaron Alan Mitchell @aaronalanmitchell
Performer: Pascal Johnson @pascaljohnson
Styling: Uliana Milodan @milodya
Skirts: Britt Liberg @skirts_by_britt_liberg

The present is to live or to lose: In conversation with movement director and former ballet dancer Pascal Johnson
I recently had the pleasure of collaborating with Pascal Johnson, @pascaljohnson a former dancer with the Dutch National Ballet, now a movement director and producer who has worked for brands like Apple, Calvin Klein, and Nike, on a photo series that grew into something deeper. What started as a visual exploration turned into a dialogue about presence, memory, and what exactly an image can and cannot truly hold. Together, we approached the process as an open-ended reflection, using movement and stillness through the visual medium of photography to investigate how the body carries memory and inhabits the present.
At the heart of this series is a complicated question: can we ever really preserve something fleeting? We often believe that by permanently affixing a body into image that we are holding on to something true. But permanence does not equal meaning. Time strips away context, and leaves behind a thin surface, a static impression of a figure that once moved with thought, fear, laughter, and love. What is left is a fossil of ego, a trace of something that was never meant to be still.
Read full story @c41magazine
Words: Aaron Alan Mitchell & Pascal Johnson
Photography: Aaron Alan Mitchell @aaronalanmitchell
Performer: Pascal Johnson @pascaljohnson
Styling: Uliana Milodan @milodya
Skirts: Britt Liberg @skirts_by_britt_liberg

The present is to live or to lose: In conversation with movement director and former ballet dancer Pascal Johnson
I recently had the pleasure of collaborating with Pascal Johnson, @pascaljohnson a former dancer with the Dutch National Ballet, now a movement director and producer who has worked for brands like Apple, Calvin Klein, and Nike, on a photo series that grew into something deeper. What started as a visual exploration turned into a dialogue about presence, memory, and what exactly an image can and cannot truly hold. Together, we approached the process as an open-ended reflection, using movement and stillness through the visual medium of photography to investigate how the body carries memory and inhabits the present.
At the heart of this series is a complicated question: can we ever really preserve something fleeting? We often believe that by permanently affixing a body into image that we are holding on to something true. But permanence does not equal meaning. Time strips away context, and leaves behind a thin surface, a static impression of a figure that once moved with thought, fear, laughter, and love. What is left is a fossil of ego, a trace of something that was never meant to be still.
Read full story @c41magazine
Words: Aaron Alan Mitchell & Pascal Johnson
Photography: Aaron Alan Mitchell @aaronalanmitchell
Performer: Pascal Johnson @pascaljohnson
Styling: Uliana Milodan @milodya
Skirts: Britt Liberg @skirts_by_britt_liberg

The present is to live or to lose: In conversation with movement director and former ballet dancer Pascal Johnson
I recently had the pleasure of collaborating with Pascal Johnson, @pascaljohnson a former dancer with the Dutch National Ballet, now a movement director and producer who has worked for brands like Apple, Calvin Klein, and Nike, on a photo series that grew into something deeper. What started as a visual exploration turned into a dialogue about presence, memory, and what exactly an image can and cannot truly hold. Together, we approached the process as an open-ended reflection, using movement and stillness through the visual medium of photography to investigate how the body carries memory and inhabits the present.
At the heart of this series is a complicated question: can we ever really preserve something fleeting? We often believe that by permanently affixing a body into image that we are holding on to something true. But permanence does not equal meaning. Time strips away context, and leaves behind a thin surface, a static impression of a figure that once moved with thought, fear, laughter, and love. What is left is a fossil of ego, a trace of something that was never meant to be still.
Read full story @c41magazine
Words: Aaron Alan Mitchell & Pascal Johnson
Photography: Aaron Alan Mitchell @aaronalanmitchell
Performer: Pascal Johnson @pascaljohnson
Styling: Uliana Milodan @milodya
Skirts: Britt Liberg @skirts_by_britt_liberg

The present is to live or to lose: In conversation with movement director and former ballet dancer Pascal Johnson
I recently had the pleasure of collaborating with Pascal Johnson, @pascaljohnson a former dancer with the Dutch National Ballet, now a movement director and producer who has worked for brands like Apple, Calvin Klein, and Nike, on a photo series that grew into something deeper. What started as a visual exploration turned into a dialogue about presence, memory, and what exactly an image can and cannot truly hold. Together, we approached the process as an open-ended reflection, using movement and stillness through the visual medium of photography to investigate how the body carries memory and inhabits the present.
At the heart of this series is a complicated question: can we ever really preserve something fleeting? We often believe that by permanently affixing a body into image that we are holding on to something true. But permanence does not equal meaning. Time strips away context, and leaves behind a thin surface, a static impression of a figure that once moved with thought, fear, laughter, and love. What is left is a fossil of ego, a trace of something that was never meant to be still.
Read full story @c41magazine
Words: Aaron Alan Mitchell & Pascal Johnson
Photography: Aaron Alan Mitchell @aaronalanmitchell
Performer: Pascal Johnson @pascaljohnson
Styling: Uliana Milodan @milodya
Skirts: Britt Liberg @skirts_by_britt_liberg

The present is to live or to lose: In conversation with movement director and former ballet dancer Pascal Johnson
I recently had the pleasure of collaborating with Pascal Johnson, @pascaljohnson a former dancer with the Dutch National Ballet, now a movement director and producer who has worked for brands like Apple, Calvin Klein, and Nike, on a photo series that grew into something deeper. What started as a visual exploration turned into a dialogue about presence, memory, and what exactly an image can and cannot truly hold. Together, we approached the process as an open-ended reflection, using movement and stillness through the visual medium of photography to investigate how the body carries memory and inhabits the present.
At the heart of this series is a complicated question: can we ever really preserve something fleeting? We often believe that by permanently affixing a body into image that we are holding on to something true. But permanence does not equal meaning. Time strips away context, and leaves behind a thin surface, a static impression of a figure that once moved with thought, fear, laughter, and love. What is left is a fossil of ego, a trace of something that was never meant to be still.
Read full story @c41magazine
Words: Aaron Alan Mitchell & Pascal Johnson
Photography: Aaron Alan Mitchell @aaronalanmitchell
Performer: Pascal Johnson @pascaljohnson
Styling: Uliana Milodan @milodya
Skirts: Britt Liberg @skirts_by_britt_liberg

The present is to live or to lose: In conversation with movement director and former ballet dancer Pascal Johnson
I recently had the pleasure of collaborating with Pascal Johnson, @pascaljohnson a former dancer with the Dutch National Ballet, now a movement director and producer who has worked for brands like Apple, Calvin Klein, and Nike, on a photo series that grew into something deeper. What started as a visual exploration turned into a dialogue about presence, memory, and what exactly an image can and cannot truly hold. Together, we approached the process as an open-ended reflection, using movement and stillness through the visual medium of photography to investigate how the body carries memory and inhabits the present.
At the heart of this series is a complicated question: can we ever really preserve something fleeting? We often believe that by permanently affixing a body into image that we are holding on to something true. But permanence does not equal meaning. Time strips away context, and leaves behind a thin surface, a static impression of a figure that once moved with thought, fear, laughter, and love. What is left is a fossil of ego, a trace of something that was never meant to be still.
Read full story @c41magazine
Words: Aaron Alan Mitchell & Pascal Johnson
Photography: Aaron Alan Mitchell @aaronalanmitchell
Performer: Pascal Johnson @pascaljohnson
Styling: Uliana Milodan @milodya
Skirts: Britt Liberg @skirts_by_britt_liberg

The present is to live or to lose: In conversation with movement director and former ballet dancer Pascal Johnson
I recently had the pleasure of collaborating with Pascal Johnson, @pascaljohnson a former dancer with the Dutch National Ballet, now a movement director and producer who has worked for brands like Apple, Calvin Klein, and Nike, on a photo series that grew into something deeper. What started as a visual exploration turned into a dialogue about presence, memory, and what exactly an image can and cannot truly hold. Together, we approached the process as an open-ended reflection, using movement and stillness through the visual medium of photography to investigate how the body carries memory and inhabits the present.
At the heart of this series is a complicated question: can we ever really preserve something fleeting? We often believe that by permanently affixing a body into image that we are holding on to something true. But permanence does not equal meaning. Time strips away context, and leaves behind a thin surface, a static impression of a figure that once moved with thought, fear, laughter, and love. What is left is a fossil of ego, a trace of something that was never meant to be still.
Read full story @c41magazine
Words: Aaron Alan Mitchell & Pascal Johnson
Photography: Aaron Alan Mitchell @aaronalanmitchell
Performer: Pascal Johnson @pascaljohnson
Styling: Uliana Milodan @milodya
Skirts: Britt Liberg @skirts_by_britt_liberg

The present is to live or to lose: In conversation with movement director and former ballet dancer Pascal Johnson
I recently had the pleasure of collaborating with Pascal Johnson, @pascaljohnson a former dancer with the Dutch National Ballet, now a movement director and producer who has worked for brands like Apple, Calvin Klein, and Nike, on a photo series that grew into something deeper. What started as a visual exploration turned into a dialogue about presence, memory, and what exactly an image can and cannot truly hold. Together, we approached the process as an open-ended reflection, using movement and stillness through the visual medium of photography to investigate how the body carries memory and inhabits the present.
At the heart of this series is a complicated question: can we ever really preserve something fleeting? We often believe that by permanently affixing a body into image that we are holding on to something true. But permanence does not equal meaning. Time strips away context, and leaves behind a thin surface, a static impression of a figure that once moved with thought, fear, laughter, and love. What is left is a fossil of ego, a trace of something that was never meant to be still.
Read full story @c41magazine
Words: Aaron Alan Mitchell & Pascal Johnson
Photography: Aaron Alan Mitchell @aaronalanmitchell
Performer: Pascal Johnson @pascaljohnson
Styling: Uliana Milodan @milodya
Skirts: Britt Liberg @skirts_by_britt_liberg

The present is to live or to lose: In conversation with movement director and former ballet dancer Pascal Johnson
I recently had the pleasure of collaborating with Pascal Johnson, @pascaljohnson a former dancer with the Dutch National Ballet, now a movement director and producer who has worked for brands like Apple, Calvin Klein, and Nike, on a photo series that grew into something deeper. What started as a visual exploration turned into a dialogue about presence, memory, and what exactly an image can and cannot truly hold. Together, we approached the process as an open-ended reflection, using movement and stillness through the visual medium of photography to investigate how the body carries memory and inhabits the present.
At the heart of this series is a complicated question: can we ever really preserve something fleeting? We often believe that by permanently affixing a body into image that we are holding on to something true. But permanence does not equal meaning. Time strips away context, and leaves behind a thin surface, a static impression of a figure that once moved with thought, fear, laughter, and love. What is left is a fossil of ego, a trace of something that was never meant to be still.
Read full story @c41magazine
Words: Aaron Alan Mitchell & Pascal Johnson
Photography: Aaron Alan Mitchell @aaronalanmitchell
Performer: Pascal Johnson @pascaljohnson
Styling: Uliana Milodan @milodya
Skirts: Britt Liberg @skirts_by_britt_liberg

The present is to live or to lose: In conversation with movement director and former ballet dancer Pascal Johnson
I recently had the pleasure of collaborating with Pascal Johnson, @pascaljohnson a former dancer with the Dutch National Ballet, now a movement director and producer who has worked for brands like Apple, Calvin Klein, and Nike, on a photo series that grew into something deeper. What started as a visual exploration turned into a dialogue about presence, memory, and what exactly an image can and cannot truly hold. Together, we approached the process as an open-ended reflection, using movement and stillness through the visual medium of photography to investigate how the body carries memory and inhabits the present.
At the heart of this series is a complicated question: can we ever really preserve something fleeting? We often believe that by permanently affixing a body into image that we are holding on to something true. But permanence does not equal meaning. Time strips away context, and leaves behind a thin surface, a static impression of a figure that once moved with thought, fear, laughter, and love. What is left is a fossil of ego, a trace of something that was never meant to be still.
Read full story @c41magazine
Words: Aaron Alan Mitchell & Pascal Johnson
Photography: Aaron Alan Mitchell @aaronalanmitchell
Performer: Pascal Johnson @pascaljohnson
Styling: Uliana Milodan @milodya
Skirts: Britt Liberg @skirts_by_britt_liberg

Yuliia in Biarritz wearing Wool Sweater and Shorts handmade by @les3gracesbiarritz
@julie.donchuk
#biarritz #cotebasque #france #fashionphotography

Design studio @ceriani_szostak have just begun the next chapter of their story in Milano. I’m grateful to have had the opportunity to photograph the duo before they left Amsterdam.
@gilbertoceriani
@ania_szostak_

Had the great privilege to photograph the immensely talented sculptor and painter @laura_pasquino

Had the great privilege to photograph the immensely talented sculptor and painter @laura_pasquino

Had the great privilege to photograph the immensely talented sculptor and painter @laura_pasquino

Malijn
@malijnpieterse
Styling @matsehora.hanna
HMUA @jasonmurillohair
@xxray.studio

Malijn
@malijnpieterse
Styling @matsehora.hanna
HMUA @jasonmurillohair
@xxray.studio

Malijn
@malijnpieterse
Styling @matsehora.hanna
HMUA @jasonmurillohair
@xxray.studio

Malijn
@malijnpieterse
Styling @matsehora.hanna
HMUA @jasonmurillohair
@xxray.studio

Malijn
@malijnpieterse
Styling @matsehora.hanna
HMUA @jasonmurillohair
@xxray.studio

Malijn
@malijnpieterse
Styling @matsehora.hanna
HMUA @jasonmurillohair
@xxray.studio
I’ve been putting together editorial packages for a while now and a few have ended up published in magazines, helping the people I’ve worked with reach a much wider audience.
I’m now offering this in an all-in-one press ready package.
Photography, a written interview or profile, and a publication-ready layout.
This is for anyone who has built something worth talking about but doesn’t yet have the press materials to prove it. Brands, creatives, businesses, anyone who needs more than a bio to tell their story properly.
Press coverage builds credibility that advertising can’t buy. But most people don’t have the photography, the writing, and the design to make it happen. Let alone all three working together.
Interested? DM me.
I’m taking on a small number of these to start, if it sounds like the right fit, let’s talk.
O Visualizador de Stories do Instagram é uma ferramenta fácil que permite assistir e salvar stories, vídeos, fotos ou IGTV do Instagram secretamente. Com este serviço, você pode baixar conteúdos e apreciá-los offline sempre que quiser. Se você encontrar algo interessante no Instagram que gostaria de ver mais tarde ou quiser visualizar stories de forma anônima, nosso Visualizador é perfeito para você. Anonstories oferece uma excelente solução para manter sua identidade oculta. O Instagram lançou a funcionalidade de Stories em agosto de 2023, que logo foi adotada por outras plataformas devido ao seu formato dinâmico e sensível ao tempo. Os Stories permitem que os usuários compartilhem atualizações rápidas, sejam fotos, vídeos ou selfies, com textos, emojis ou filtros, e ficam visíveis por apenas 24 horas. Esse limite de tempo cria maior engajamento em comparação com posts comuns. Nos dias de hoje, os Stories são uma das formas mais populares de se conectar e comunicar nas redes sociais. No entanto, quando você visualiza um Story, o criador pode ver seu nome na lista de visualizadores, o que pode ser uma preocupação com a privacidade. E se você quiser navegar pelos Stories sem ser notado? É aí que o Anonstories se torna útil. Ele permite que você assista a conteúdos públicos do Instagram sem revelar sua identidade. Basta digitar o nome de usuário do perfil que você está curioso, e a ferramenta mostrará seus Stories mais recentes. Funcionalidades do Visualizador Anonstories: - Navegação Anônima: Veja Stories sem aparecer na lista de visualizadores. - Sem Conta Necessária: Veja conteúdos públicos sem se cadastrar no Instagram. - Download de Conteúdos: Salve qualquer conteúdo de Stories diretamente no seu dispositivo para uso offline. - Veja Destaques: Acesse os Destaques do Instagram, até mesmo após o prazo de 24 horas. - Monitoramento de Reposts: Acompanhe os reposts ou o nível de engajamento em Stories de perfis pessoais. Limitações: - Esta ferramenta funciona apenas com contas públicas; contas privadas permanecem inacessíveis. Benefícios: - Amigável à Privacidade: Veja qualquer conteúdo do Instagram sem ser notado. - Simples e Fácil: Não há necessidade de instalação de aplicativo ou registro. - Ferramentas Exclusivas: Baixe e gerencie conteúdos de maneiras que o Instagram não oferece.
Acompanhe as atualizações do Instagram de forma discreta, protegendo sua privacidade e permanecendo anônimo.
Veja perfis e fotos anonimamente com facilidade usando o Visualizador de Perfil Privado.
Esta ferramenta gratuita permite que você veja Stories do Instagram anonimamente, garantindo que sua atividade permaneça oculta do criador do story.
Anonstories permite que os usuários vejam stories do Instagram sem alertar o criador.
Funciona perfeitamente em iOS, Android, Windows, macOS e navegadores modernos como Chrome e Safari.
Prioriza navegação segura e anônima, sem necessidade de credenciais de login.
Os usuários podem visualizar stories públicos digitando apenas o nome de usuário—sem precisar de uma conta.
Baixa fotos (JPEG) e vídeos (MP4) com facilidade.
O serviço é gratuito.
Conteúdos de contas privadas só podem ser acessados por seguidores.
Os arquivos são para uso pessoal ou educacional, conforme as regras de direitos autorais.
Digite um nome de usuário público para ver ou baixar stories. O serviço gera links diretos para salvar o conteúdo localmente.