Photographer Lois Bielefeld offers a look inside to Americans during intimate moments with the family at the table. When she was a child, my parents instilled in her a proper table etiquette. So Lois wondered, do it all the family and made it in them to sit at the table together.
"My family always gathered for dinner (had to ask permission to leave the table), says Bielefeld. — I'm not very interested in eating them for as long as I have matured and did not start regularly prepare and look for their tastes. But even at a young age, I recognized that food brings people together and is a way to explore different cultures."
Usually these images are exposed in a large format that allows the viewer as if to join the depicted meal. "The project itself is removed in the evenings from Monday to Thursday because I wanted to capture the habits and rituals that formed pressed for time in the evenings during the week. At the weekend people have more time, says the author of the project. I work with the series, because I like to see the similarities and differences in people that are close to all — we all eat."
"I love all the little details in people's homes. I look at these pictures and large prints more than anyone, all the time find the photos of the new things that I hadn't noticed," says the photographer.
Look to these pictures. They really can be examined for hours, they have so much detail and features.