Nicholas Samaras was born in Thessaloniki, Greece in 1976. He grew up on a farm but always loved the ocean. He studied photography at Central St. Martins College of Art and Design in London. In his early twenties he started working as a video editor for major TV stations in Greece. This gave him experience for his later occasional appearances as an actor and director of photography.
He had a passion for underwater photography and loved the sea and its creatures. In 2006 he participated in his first international underwater photography competition, the DAN EUROPE PHOTO CONTEST, and met with success. Since then he has taken thousands of pictures around
the globe and won many international awards. Many of his photos have been published in articles and featured on the cover pages of magazines such as National Geographic, and Underwater Photography web Magazine.
Nicholas
Samaras has experimented with several categories of underwater photography, like
abstract pictures, silhouettes, black and white, underwater athletes and
models, and more.
“Every time I say, “Okay, that’s the weirdest thing I
have ever seen and photographed,” something new comes up – usually when I’m
shooting something in the macro and super-macro kingdom. The sea is a
classroom, and what catches my attention are weird behaviours, strange
symbioses, and collaborations for survival.” ~Nicholas Samaras
“I had completed two very successful trips to the Red
Sea and had very good material from my dives in the Greek seas, and I was
feeling ready to organise my first underwater photography exhibition – but I
was missing the lead photo. At that time I had been visiting a diving centre in
Sithonia, Chalkidiki to spend my summer vacation, and during a cave dive my
model moved to the entrance of the cave and posed like the “Christ the
Redeemer” statue in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil – a pose we’d been discussing some
time before. The timing was amazing! She remembered our discussion and felt it
was that time to do it! The sun was low, lighting the entrance of the cave from
the surface, and the framing from the rocks was spectacular. That photo
inspired the name of the exhibition, which was “Soulfly”, and still creates
strong emotions every time I see it.” ~Nicholas Samaras
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