Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts

LYNSEY ADDARIO ... "It's What I Do"

I am deeply fascinated by all things photography.  Both of my parents have a love for the camera and I think it fostered a mutual desire to use the lens to capture what is going on around me.

I have also long had an obsession of sorts with newspaper photographers.  Recently there has been quite a bit of coverage relating to all matters concerning the reporting of news and the photographic images that go along with them.

First, the very famous photo of Samar.



During the Iraq war, the rest of us around the world relied on newspapers and news stations to keep us up to date with the latest happenings.  We heard about violent foot patrols and read about tragedies and deaths ... but until you see a photo like this, it doesn't seem to really set in or ring true.

As is stated in the article, because the country was dangerous for photographers, there were not many photographs of the Iraq war that hit a nerve.  The article goes on to discuss Samar and her life since the war.

(I had no idea that Mr. Hondros - who photographed Samar - was asked to leave his assignment after those photos were taken due to military rules)

In April of this year, New York Times photographer Chris Hondros, was killed in Misurata, Libya -- while on assignment.  One other photographer was killed and two photographers were also wounded, all working beside him at the city's front lines.  The piece on his death was moving.  Chris Hondros'  blog is also quite amazing.

Equally as inspiring and moving?  The follow up piece written by the Editor of the New York Times, Bill Keller.  Keller talks honestly about what our nation's media owes the people of the country and what risks should be taken to ensure that our insatiable and sometimes grotesque hunger for shocking news is fed.
Covering conflict is perilous for anyone — reporters, local stringers, the drivers and interpreters we depend on — but photographers are more exposed, in at least two senses of the word. They need a sustained line of sight to frame their photographs; a reliable source is never enough. And they cannot avert their eyes; they have to let the images in, no matter how searing or disturbing. Robert Capa’s famous advice to younger photographers — “Get closer” — translates in combat to “get more vulnerable,” both literally and emotionally.
Then there is Kevin Carter.  He shot this photograph while on assignment in Sudan.



After this picture made its way onto our laptops and television screens, Carter was asked "what happend to that child?"

Carter didn't know.

He had simply captured an image ... (which, according to another photographer, the child was not alone or in a menacing situation, as there were adults nearby).

Mr. Carter committed suicide just a couple of months after receiving the Pulitzer Prize ... receiving an award ... for this photograph.

“Sometimes we fail our own moral compass, our own emotional compass,” Greg Marinovich said (fellow photographer). “Kevin [Carter] was a bloody warm, generous and fantastic guy, and I’m surprised that he didn’t pick up the kid, just to make himself feel better.”

***

In March of this year, New York Times photographer Lynsey Addario was freed from captivity in Libya, along with Tyler Hicks, Stephen Farrell and Anthony Shadid. (more about their ordeal)

Some comments to this story about Lynsey's capture included words like “How dare a woman go to a war zone?” and “How could The New York Times let a woman go to the war zone?”

Lynsey's response?  
To me, that’s grossly offensive. This is my life, and I make my own decisions.
If a woman wants to be a war photographer, she should. It’s important. Women offer a different perspective. We have access to women on a different level than men have, just as male photographers have a different relationship with the men they’re covering.
In the Muslim world, most of my male colleagues can’t enter private homes. They can’t hang out with very conservative Muslim families. I have always been able to. It’s not easy to get the right to photograph in a house, but at least I have one foot in the door. I’ve always found it a great advantage, being a woman.

People think photography is about photographing. To me, it’s about relationships. And it’s about doing your homework and making people comfortable enough where they open their lives to you. People underestimate me because I’m always laughing and joking. That helps. They let their guard down.
I try to do women’s stories when I can, but I don’t want to be pigeonholed as just a women’s photographer, because my interest is in covering the whole story — and human rights abuses and humanitarian issues. Ironically, I don’t think I saw more than a handful of women the entire time I was in Libya.
I will cover another war. I’m sure I will. It’s what I do. It’s important to show people what’s happening. We have a unique access to what unfolds on the ground that helps our policymakers decide how to treat certain issues.



Speaking of soldiers and the frontline ... did you happen to read the article "After Coming Home"?  It's the final article in a series following the First Battalion, 87th Infantry Regiment in Afghanistan

A snippet ::

For a year, they had navigated minefields and ducked bullets, endured tedium inside barbed-wired outposts and stitched together the frayed seams of long-distance relationships. One would think that going home would be the easiest thing troops could do.
 The whole series can be found at the New York Times.    The video is quite long (10 minutes) but there are some great the photos are amazing and it's worth a poke around.

There is a lot to digest here.  If you stuck with the whole post, what say you? Did anything strike a nerve?




One word ...

Participating in a 52 Photos Project ... and although I'm jumping in late ...


52 Photos Project

 ... this week's prompt was to choose one word that describes you ... and then photograph it.  

I was unable to come up with one word that described me.  I'm in quite the funk lately with several issues and when a word (I assumed we should choose a positive word) would come to mind, I found myself immediately discounting and negating it for many reasons.  Though I know that I have many positive traits and strengths, I'm not feeling them at the moment.

I went through a journal that I've recently started to create in the hopes that it would help me determine "the word" that I would use for this week ... and I just couldn't do it.  I ended up self-doubting, criticizing myself (boy, is that dangerous when you start to knock your own self down to the floor) and just being all out mopey.

I was also unable to figure out any creative ways/places to see any of the words that I was supposed to be coming up with for this project.

SO ... in the end I emailed a handful of my good friends, the women that know me the best -- and asked them to help me out with suggestions for this theme.

End result ??  A photograph of the word that was repeated a couple of times by different friends ... Adventurous ... on a backdrop of where I was born.  I've come a long way baby .... literally.


INDOMANIA POTTERY TOUR ... part IV

More in the series about the Indomania Pottery Tour.  

Photos only this time ... my words don't do this experience justice.



(Living in Delhi and ready to go on the tour??  Contact Piyush at (91) 8860223456 or info@indomaniatours.com) 


























WEEKS IN PHOTOS.

I've been ridiculously lazy about taking photographs lately.  It doesn't make me happy that I've slacked off ... but it does mean I have less images to try and organize. 

(I'm STILL aiming to find the perfect solution for how best to organize my photos ... any suggestions?  I'm talking about the basics of what to do from camera - to computer - to picasa - to cropping (I don't do any other editing besides trying to give some more light via Picasa) - to blog/photo book).

Some photos ... some captioned and some not ... from the past couple of weeks.


Taken in Indira Market ... laundry time.




I have an obsession and fascination with these trunks. 



My favorite little dude from the corner near Vasant Vihar under Ring Road.  His bunches of flowers are Rs 100 per bunch (just over USD $2.00).  He has the sweetest, raspiest little voice ever.



Rolling water.












THE RIPPLE EFFECT.


The ripple effect is a term used to describe a situation where, like the ever expanding ripples across water when an object is dropped into it, an effect from an initial state can be followed outwards incrementally.


~ ~ ~

I had the opportunity to meet Annie Griffiths, one of the first women photographers for National Geographic, during a morning coffee held recently.



Her bio reads as follows ::

She has covered women’s issues on six continents and her work has been featured in the Geographic, LIFE, Geo, Smithsonian, Time, Stern, and many other publications. Her books include A Camera, Two Kids and a Camel and Last Stand: America’s Virgin Lands, done in partnership with acclaimed author Barbara Kingsolver. Proceeds from the book have raised more than a quarter million dollars for grassroots land conservation. Annie is deeply committed to photographing need around the world. For more than a decade she has dedicated a portion of each year to documenting the important work of aid organizations. She has received awards from the National Press Photographers Association, the Associated Press, the National Organization of Women, and the White House News Photographers Association.
Annie is a humble, down-to-earth human being, with a heart bigger than herself, and dreams and a zest for life that is not containable in the room in which she stands.  Her eye for capturing the world and the women who live in it is artistic, honest and inspiring.

As cool as it was to meet her, it was even more amazing to learn about her project.  She has embraced and created Ripple Effect Images.

From their website ::

Ripple Effect Images is a team of journalists who are dedicated to documenting the plight of, and the programs that are helping, poor women and girls around the world as they deal with the devastating effects of climate change. Working closely with scientists and NGOs to identify both the needs and the innovative programs that are helping women and girls, Ripple Effect journalists make strategic trips to document these programs. They then donate their photographs, video, and stories to the Ripple Effect Images Archive. This Archive is made available, at little or no cost, to our partner aid organizations and to policymakers who are working to help poor women as they deal with the tremendous challenges caused by climate change. The extraordinary Ripple Effect team includes a MacArthur Genius Fellow, as well as Pulitzer Prize, Emmy Award, and National Humanities Medal winners.
Ripple Effect's mission is to raise awareness and funding to help empower women and girls in emerging nations around the world. We are currently working with NGOs, ambassadors, corporate leaders, and the State Department.
Imagine a phenomenal NGO or non-profit that is doing great things to empower and enable women ... whose organizers and leaders throw themselves into their work.  Too often though, their work is not easily shared with others around the world -- for the sake of awareness, funding or assistance  -- because either there is no budget for marketing/communication or there is no one available to simply document and photograph the great work they are doing.

This is where Ripple Effects comes in.

Annie enlisted a team of five of the worlds TOP female photographers (go girl power!), an Emmy award winning filmographer and Barbara Kingsolver (author of The Poisonwood Bible) to go forth into various international locations to shoot, capture, document and ultimately share the stories of women.  

Women who hold the weight of the world on their shoulders.  Women who care, not only for their immediate family, but their villages, towns and cities.  Women who put others above themselves.  Women who resist tragic outcomes and instead fight to save lives, farms, homes, and dreams.  Women who educate, train and teach those that come behind them.  

Once sustainable and effective projects and programs have been identified, the Ripple Effects Team spends tireless hours filming and learning about the amazing women being helped through various NGOs.  An archive of photographs is compiled, a video is created and then all of this media is provided at NO CHARGE to organizations to use in better exposing themselves to the world.  


This team has been focusing on countries such as Kenya, Bangladesh and Jordan.  Guess what country is next?


The Ripple Effect team has their sights (and cameras focused) on India for THIS Fall, and it will be exciting to learn more about how we can help bring this amazing program to the NGOs of India, and in turn help a woman ... help a planet.

For more information, visit their website or watch this gorgeous video, narrated by the fabulous Allison Janney ::
 

 



The Answer is Clear from Ripple Effect Images on Vimeo.


When women unite, hold hands and set their minds to something, anything is possible.  The proven ripple effect of this team and their subsequent project is amazingly huge.  If you would like to get involved in their phenomenal work, contact them at info@rippleeffectimages.org

If you'd like to simply donate and do your part in that way, click HERE.



INCLUDING ME.

Karen recently had a great blog post about writing stuff down ... and capturing images of herself on film.


When you're the photographer, or the mama ... often the photo history of your life as a family unfortunately does NOT include images of you.


I first started writing at my personal Donuts and Graham Crackers blog in an effort to capture memories and put down on 'paper' the lives of my kiddos. My first posts were a recreation of my handwritten journals from 2003 - 2007.  I then posted the highs and lows, the funny and the sad in our lives from 2008 - 2009 when we left for India.


In reading back through those, I realized a couple of things.  


One - I need to get back to the place where I can simply throw up a photo of something that happened during the week ... and not wait for commentary to go along with the photo.  


Two - I need to turn that quiet, dusty and forgotten blog into a coffee table book for the kids.  I create a yearly photo book for the family, but to capture the early years with them, this needs to go on my to-do list. Pronto. Stat. Like yesterday!


Three - I need to photograph myself more.  Whether that is by asking the kids to use my camera (I can ONLY imagine!), or handing it to Husb OR using my new MacBook (LOVE!) and the fun new program, iPhotoBooth. 






I don't know how regular I will be, but I will do my best to start capturing the mundane moments and everyday "stuff" that happens in MY life, even if it's just simple iPhotoBooth shots.









SUPER SPY

I have been a longtime fan and admirer of the Super Spy Lens via Photojojo ::


The basic gist is that you can be standing, facing forward ... camera out and pointed forward as well -- yet capture an image of someone standing to your left -- or to your right.

I wrote a long time ago about how shy I was when taking pictures.  I felt like I should ask permission.  I felt like I was being invasive.  I feel much more comfortable pretending to fiddle on my iPhone and discreetly take a photo that way 

(don't p'shaw me ... there are TONS of mobile phones in Delhi right now with photos of me and my kids on it!).

I can't tell you the number of times this lens has been "added to cart" and I've been SO close to pushing the "purchase" button.  I had it all figured out.  I'd have it shipped to my mother-in-law and next time the Husb goes to the United States, he'd just pick it up from her.  

But I've decided today that I'm not going to buy it.  First of all, the cost of one of these things would buy two legs for Jaipur Foot or the toiletry needs for the girls at Arushi Girls Shelter for awhile.  Secondly, I just need to get bolder about using my camera.

Capturing images in a place like Delhi is not about "sweetie, puh-leeze SMILE for me?" or "Terran, don't look so bored."

It's not about finding the right light to get the stones of an old building just right, or learning how to set the aperture just so, so that the background is fuzzy and the thing I've focused on is crystal clear.

It's about being fearless with a lens.  Not asking permission, but asking forgiveness later. 

I may be speaking craziness and have a bunch of people mad at me for not being a respectful amateur photographer.  

How is my newly decided philosophy any different than a professional photographer for National Geographic?  Do they obtain "yes" answers from every subject they photograph while they are shooting away?

I want this next couple of months to be about not necessarily getting better with my camera (because that could take Y-E-A-R-S) ... but about getting bolder with my photography.  

Spending less time regretting that I've passed up an amazing shot just because I was shy.  

What will your next couple of months be about?

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