GOOD Pictures features work by a new photographer each week, with a focus on up-and-coming artists. It is curated by Stephanie Gonot and Jennifer Mizgata.
I see Charlie Engman not just as a photographer, but as a mad scientist who uses photography to explore color, shape and our perception of space. Charlie's work is vibrant and surprising, which may be a product of his interest in things other than photography. "I have always had a graphic and poetic—as opposed to historic or referential—interest in art and photography," he told the British Journal of Photography last year. "So in order to create successful images, I feel that I need to have an understanding of 'non art,' life that ostensibly operates outside of art’s canonized boundaries.”
Charlie uses his ever-inspiring blog, or "digital sketchbook," as a place to display his photography and visual experiments, seamlessly blending together personal and commercial work. You can find these images plus many more "small ideas, references, and works" on the blog, or you can view specific categories of work on his website.
















Pyramid of Khufu
A spherical dolerite pounder.
Abeer Eladany holds open the box of splinters
The box that the missing piece of cedar was discovered
The wooden fragments dated to around 3341-3094 BC
Friends helping one another cross a creek.Photo credit
A group of young people. Photo credit
Studies suggest empathy builds connection.Photo credit
People consoling a friend.Photo credit 


Hungry and ready.Photo credit
The mac and cheese staple presentation.Photo credit
Pizza ready from the oven.Photo credit
Friends hover around the barbeque.Photo credit
Seafood platter on the beach.Photo credit
Scarecrow watches over a vegetable garden.Photo credit 


A therapist listens to a patientCanva
Animated gif of someone scrolling through phone via
A couple purchasing new car wrapped in a bow at the dealershipCanva
Man presses button a smart fridgeCanca
A woman sits alone on the beachCanva