Images from the 2013 edition Sensation “Source Of Light” Belgium.
March 9th, 2013
Ethias Arena, Hasselt. Belgium
Client: ID&T Belgium
© 2013 www.rudgr.com
Follow my work on Twitter or Facebook! Or check my most interesting shots at Flickriver.
Images from the 2013 edition Sensation “Source Of Light” Belgium.
March 9th, 2013
Ethias Arena, Hasselt. Belgium
Client: ID&T Belgium
© 2013 www.rudgr.com
Follow my work on Twitter or Facebook! Or check my most interesting shots at Flickriver.
Summer 2011, Sensation presented to you Innerspace – the world within. A spiritual journey to enlightenment, an adventurous journey through the seven stages of enlightenment. Sharing a collective consciousness of our own inner beauty, we are presented with a Sensational experience.
With DJ’s: Martin Solveig, Fedde Le Grand, AN21, Max Vangeli, Afrojack, Sander van Doorn en Juan Sanchez & Daniel Sanchez
Client: © 2011 ID&T
Images: Fotograferen.net
DJ’s Erick E en Fedde Le Grand threw a balloon powered houseparty at 4500 feet for the Radio538&Warchild charity week.

DJ Erick E on the decks at 4500ft.

DJ Fedde le Grand performing from a hot air balloon
The largest Dutch radio station and the charity that helps children and parents from war-torn regions setup a stunt-filled week to raise funds to help as many children as possible. People could get chosen to do all sorts of stunt by texting the special number. Persons lucky enough to send the xxth text message were chosen for the stunt. In this case 60 people for a rare feat: tying three hot air ballons for a house party at 4500 feet!
As a senior Radio538 photographer, I was asked to photograph one of the coolest stunts of the week and got to climb aboard the formerly largest hot air balloon in the world with a group of collegues.

Mission accomplished and money raised for the WarChild charity.
Follow my work on Twitter or Facebook! Or check my most interesting shots at Flickriver.
Images from the Sensation 2009 party “Wicked Wonderland” in the Amsterdam ArenA with: Erick E, Fedde le Grand, S. Ingrosso, Mr. White and Sander van Doorn.
Visit the full Flickr Gallery here if you don’t want to use the slideshow.
Artist Cornelis le Mair is one of the most incredible people I have ever met and he lives in the craziest and nicest house in the Netherlands. A house that would easily fit into the Efteling as a top-attraction.


Some time ago I was asked to do a portrait series on this artist for Tulp magazine, a glossy that I do quite a bit of work for, mostly travel though.
Place to go was an almost unlocatable farm on the outskirts of Eindhoven. My TomTom was giving me a headache (perhaps the other way around as well), maybe since the most beautiful places are hard to find.
While being stuck near a sprakling white new villa with two vicous dogs eying me it dawned me that this probably wasn’t a place where I would find a classical painter. Time to send out a call for help and guess what? I had just passed the farm about three times already. it was 200 meters down the road, paradise isn’t easily found.



In my rearview mirror was a tall slim man with an incredible white beard waving me to come over. Moments later my car was parked between chickens, goats and plenty of other small feathered animals. A beautiful old farmhouse with wooden walkthroughs that went into the trees just had to be the house of a genious. This was the home of the man who painted fullsized Rembrandts on his bedroom walls when he was a little kid.


Cornelis just breathes Art, capital A. Even in the sixties, when classical painting was frowned upon, he managed to get himself into the best art school available in Holland. He was simply too good, even in an age where modern art was considered to be everything.


Going against the stream of modern art has never failed him, never did he have to put in an efoort to sell a painting, everything he makes is sold before the paint’s even dry. Just doing what he feels like takes him into creating fantasy model houses that are so big and detailed you just can’t stop wondering how much time went into them (about three years it turned out to be).

No matter if you like classical paintings or not, you just got to love the man and his home. In no photo any object was replaced for the shot, it’s just how it is and that was just a dream to photograph. The house is the house as it is.


By the way, neither were any of the photo’s retouched, this is just how they came out of the camera.
