• JP and Mike Andrews run Aerial Abstract Art, a photography company that takes unique top-down photos of objects in nature using a drone.
  • Following a 2016 trip to Australia, the brothers decided to drop everything to pursue their passion, buying a drone to photograph the world from the unique aerial vantage point a drone provides.
  • The duo has since turned their dream of traveling the world into a successful business using Instagram and just reached 100,000 followers.
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

“The point is not to work out what it is, but to show how weird and wonderful the world can look from above.”

That line follows nearly every photo posted to the Abstract Aerial Art Instagram page run by two brothers from the UK, Mike and JP Andrews. True its name, the page is filled with top-down photographs of scenes across the globe taken by the brothers with a drone.

A seemingly simple concept, the popularity of the stunning and aesthetically pleasing photos has soared to heights not even expected by its founders, who just hit the 100,000 follower mark on the photo-sharing platform.

The almost four-year-old enterprise was started in 2016 after the duo, spurred by heartbreak, packed up and flew to Australia to spend a year driving up the continent’s east coast. Unimpressed with their initial beach and bar-hopping experience, the Andrews’ amended their plans and headed into the Outback.

Eventually winding up in Perth with a broken-down car after crossing the continent, Mike and JP returned to England expecting to pick up where they left off in their respective jobs and lives.

But Australia wasn't through with them yet and they soon found themselves back in the wilderness armed with a drone and an idea of how to keep their dream alive.

Here's how they did it.


The two brothers wound up back in Australia before year's end in 2016 with an Inspire 1 Pro that they dipped into their savings to purchase.

Foto: The Australian Outback.

They'd seen the beauty of the Outback firsthand and up close but the drone would allow them to experience and photograph it from a unique point of view. Drone photography was still in its nascent years then and wasn't as pervasive as it is now.

Foto: The Australian Outback.

The wide-open spaces provided by the desert environment allowed them to practice their new craft without interruption while capturing stunning photos from above and showcase vistas in a way normally only accomplished with airplanes or helicopters.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

"We just pointed the camera down and took some snaps, got back on the computer and looked down and thought, 'wow, that's incredible,'" JP Andrews told Business Insider in an interview. "That looks like abstract art."

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

And off they want, in search of the best locations for their new style of photography. Australia, as they found, had no shortage of unique sights to photograph including this mix of oil and iron near a refinery.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

The majority are true abstracts and it's often impossible to tell what the subject of each photo is. The brothers took me through 50 photos and nearly all of my guesses were completely wrong, including this one of an aluminum mine somewhere in Australia.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

Just a few days before Christmas in 2016, the Andrews' started their own Instagram page, Abstract Aerial Art, which they've since grown to over 100,000 followers.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

The response from the photographs on the platform was almost immediate with the brothers receiving messages of support from large companies and other photographers that encouraged them to keep going.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

So they began traveling in search of more photos, and it's taken them all over the world.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

The brothers have taken their unique craft to Asia...

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

The Middle East...

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

America...

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

And across Europe, snapping photos from their aerial vantage point. They're not the photos most people think of when those locations come to mind but it's how the Andrews now see the world.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

Though the concept seems simple – launch a drone and point the camera down – there's a lot of preparation that goes on behind the scenes.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

Google Earth is often used to scout locations beforehand, with the two becoming an expert with the software to pinpoint the most unusual locations in even the largest cities, like Hong Kong.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

On the outskirts of the city near an industrial park, for example, JP and Mike found this fuselage used as a trainer for firefighters that practice battling aircraft fires.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

And while tourists to the city are after the views of these buildings from Victoria Peak, the brothers were chiefly interested in the top-down view using the drone.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

JP and Mike also hate when people are in their photos, for the most part, so they'll often scout out a spot to know when it'll be deserted so they can come back and get the ideal shot. It can take hours, sometimes, but gets this perfect shot of a beach in Italy just after sunrise.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

In other cases, like during a trip to Germany, a random person in a photo can enhance its aesthetic.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

To capture this photo, aptly named "Skyline" thanks to the reflection of the containers on the river," the brothers drove through the night from the UK to the Netherlands to get the shot. They got lucky and only had to wait around 30 minutes before they completed their mission.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

Even with hours of planning, though, sometimes getting the right shot comes down to luck. While on a shoot in Italy, a fire had burned hundreds of cars in an Italian port city and the brothers had inadvertently stumbled upon this graveyard while flying back from their main subject.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

And while in Dubai, they got lucky with a surprise rain that made the road darker and better for this photo.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

Most of the shots are taken from a height of around 400 feet, below the flight path of planes flying overhead.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

Without being able to stage most of the photos, the brothers are relying heavily on the natural beauty of the outdoors and are often surprised by what they're able to get.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

It's almost as if the objects in some photos know they're posing for a photo and arrange themselves in the most especially pleasing way possible.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

Art installations also make for great aerial photos, as the brothers found in Spain and Belgium.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

Often very little staging goes into the photos but the brothers decided to go nuclear with the black and yellow umbrella in the middle of a Belgian maze. The drone also came in handy when it was time to exit the labyrinth.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

The term abstract is used more generally on the page, with some photos featuring easily identifiable subjects like this abandoned Cold War-era jet in a Belgian field,

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

Or this dilapidated plane in Italy.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

Sometimes, their little red hatchback will make its way into the photos to give perspective.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

It's been all across Europe with them, including this car park at the near-abandoned Ciudad Real Airport in Spain.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

Some photos, however, do have a true abstract feel as if they were painted by Pablo Picasso himself and coincidentally, this photo was taken in Spain.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

Similarly to Australia, the brothers have found that Iceland makes for great aerial photos thanks to its natural wonders like black sand beaches and braided rivers.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

The natural beauty formed by the land of ice and snow has produced truly awe-inspiring photos taken from above.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

They've even stumbled upon the unnatural sights that Iceland has to offer, including the 1973 wreck of a US Navy Douglas DC-3 aircraft.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

Source: Atlas Obscura


In true abstract form, JP and Mike don't often know exactly what they're taking photos of and they often don't need to.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

They'll often speculate, like with these random lines in a Dutch forest that they presume was a traffic circle at one point.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

But as their motto states, it doesn't matter what the subject is.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

Knowing the subject might ruin the illusion. For example, I initially thought this photo was an extreme close-up of a piece of fabric and was shocked to discover it was of a coal mine in Germany.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

But that doesn't stop their followers from wanting to know or commenting if they know what it is.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

This photo of an abandoned fighter jet in Europe spurred a discussion in the comment section with followers debated whether it was an F-15 or a Panavia Tornado. (It's a Tornado.)

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

When it comes to running their social media page, the brothers say that the key is engagement.

Foto:

JP and Mike try to respond to every message and comment they get and will tell followers trying to build their own accounts that engagement is important, especially as Instagram's algorithms supposedly favor engagement.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

The photography enabled JP and Mike to land a contract with Getty Images, allowing them to do this for a living. It's a dream come true.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

"We've got a contract with Getty, which is great," Mike Andrews said. "We can supply them, we travel the world and supply them and get paid from them. And we'll just continue doing Instagram [which] is what we love."

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

The popularity of the photos has grown so much that major brands or companies will also hire JP and Mike to photograph their products.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

A recent project with VistaJet saw the brothers at an airport snapping photos of a $70 million private jet, the Bombardier Global 7500.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

Here's what that plane looks like from a normal perspective.

Foto:

Read More: Private jet industry CEOs say 2 new planes coming out soon will change the business forever. See inside the Gulfstream G700 and Bombardier Global 7500.


The trifecta of the Getty contract, Instagram success, and the side jobs for companies like VistaJet is enough to keep them going, plus they also sell prints of their photos on their website.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

The brothers do want to eventually work with an artist to expand upon the pictures and use them to create "3D pieces of art."

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

A book of their work is also on the list as the collection, combined with the anecdotes of their travels, would make a great coffee table book.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

The pandemic has largely grounded the photographers, forcing them to draw from their backlog during the downtime until they can travel again.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

But as long as they get to continue to photograph and travel, whatever project they take on next will be exactly what they want to be doing.

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art

"I mean, to be honest, we don't really want to do anything different than what we're doing now," JP Andrews said. "We get to travel the world and we don't get asked to do anything other than what we're doing."

Foto: An Abstract Aerial Art photo. Source: Abstract Aerial Art