Who Are the Homeless?

Image © Jake Anderson Homeless Souls

“GET A JOB, BUM, LOSER…It gets to me, then it’s hard to smile.” –Chris, Portland, OR

Photographer Jake Anderson wanted to explore his own reactions to the homeless as well as find out who the homeless are, to look at what most people turn away from.

Anderson traveled the country taking photographs of the homeless, but his project is more of a collaboration.

He directly engaged the people he encountered, collecting their handwritten words, commentary, poetry, and drawings. The voices that emerge are the voices of the people living on the streets, and the images take on a kind of transparent photography that lets you actually see and hear the homeless—maybe for the first time.

One young man writes in a painful stream-of-consciousness about the choices that drove him to life on the streets, and his hope for the future; another simply writes his name and asks for help.

Image: © Jake Anderson - Homeless Souls

These stories are collected in a new book from Anderson, Homeless Souls. Proceeds from sales of the book go to organizations supporting the homeless.

You can view more samples of Jake Anderson’s work at his website. Purchase of the copy of the book from Antrim House Books or Amazon.

Everyone Has Hope: Photos by Burmese Refugee Children

Photo by Amos

SIX BURMESE CHILDREN LEARNED PHOTOGRAPHY to document their lives as refugees living in Kuala Lumpur and recently presented their work in the exhibition, Everyone Has Hope, held earlier this month in KL.

The children, aged 13 to 16, trained for three months with students from Taylor’s College to learn photojournalism. The project is presented through Global Changemakers’s “See The World Through Our Eyes” project and organized with support from Amnesty International Malaysia.

After the exhibition, the photography program will continue, says Colin Boyd Shafer, lecturer and Global Issues Conference Advisor for Taylor’s College. “The students still have their cameras and are being encouraged to keep up shooting.”

Photo by Peter J.

Photo by Ma Liani

According to the UNHCR, there are about 40,000 registered Burmese refugees in Malaysia, most of whom are ethnic minorities like the Chin. Many more are undocumented and the total number of refugees may be as high as one million.

The government of Malaysia is not a signatory to the 1951 Refugee Convention. Burmese in Malaysia face arrest, detention, and deportation.

View video of the exhibition opening held at the Annexe Gallery in Kuala Lumpur:

Three Photographers Offer Different Looks at War

battlesight-photography-exhibit

AN EMBEDDED PHOTOGRAPHER SHOOTING A WAR invariably produces the expected pictures: soldiers, destroyed landscapes, human suffering. In the new exhibit opening this month, Battlesight: Dispatches from Iraq and Afghanistan by International Photographers, three award-winning photographers move beyond those images of documentary war photography. The photos in this exhibit illuminate the daily lives of people caught in the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

The exhibit, hosted by The Center for Documentary Arts at The Sage Colleges, takes a humanitarian approach to documentary. The narratives in these featured photos are not merely a journalistic record of events, but show real compassion for their subjects. Each photographer gets into the minds of the people photographed.

The photographers, Cheryl Diaz Meyer, Balazs Gardi, and Teru Kuwayama, are all international award recipients and use their work not only to record and document, but also to interpret what they see.

Image © Cheryl Diaz Meyer

In 2004, Cheryl Diaz Meyer shared the Pulitzer Prize with David Leeson for Breaking News Photography. Her work captures raw human feeling, in both those moments of high emotion, and also, introspection. For example in one photo men lie on the ground, their hands bound behind them. The silent anguish and disbelief on the face of one man who faces the viewer is clear.

Image © Balazs Gardi

Balazs Gardi is a Hungarian photographer who focuses on humanitarian crises affecting local communities. His black and white photography often demonstrates a dramatic chiaroscuro. The women in this photo (right), taken in 2007, are newly recruited Afghan female police officers trained by the International Security Assistance Force, ISAF in Pol-e-Khumri, Afghanistan. Complete collections of Gardi’s work are posted on his Flickr account.

Image © Teru Kuwayama

Teru Kuwayama is co‐founder of Lightstalkers, a professional and social network of photographers, media professionals, NGO workers, military personnel, and other “unconventional travelers.” Whether shooting soldiers or the local population, Kuwayama’s work places the viewer directly in the scene, as if the viewer himself is taking the photo.

Battlesight: Dispatches from Iraq and Afghanistan by International Photographers runs from October 22 through December 19, 2010 at the Arts Center of the Capital Region in Troy, New York.

Voices of Burma: Bearing Witness for Political Prisoners

Image © Enigma Images

“EVEN THOUGH I’M FREE I AM NOT” IS A GLOBAL PHOTOGRAPHY PROJECT about Burma’s nearly 2,200 political prisoners. To raise awareness of their situation, award-winning photojournalist James Mackay travels around the world taking pictures of former political prisoners who live in exile.

Each person is photographed with the right hand up, open palm facing the viewer. This gesture is called the Buddhist Abhaya Mudra, which means “fearlessness.” Written on the palm is the name of a current political prisoner.

To date more than 160 of Burma’s former political prisoners have had their portraits taken and been interviewed for the campaign.

Image © Enigma Images

View complete galleries from Thailand, the U.K., Norway, Japan, and partner organizations like Amnesty International, at Enigma Images.

Voices of Burma is a weekly series featuring Burmese artists and activists every Wednesday now through the general election in November.

Rio’s Favelas As Seen By Brazilian Photojournalist and Artist

pedro-lobo-photographer

All images © Pedro Lobo

PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE FAVELAS IN RIO DE JANEIRO are by now very familiar: the corrugated iron walls jutting out in a stacked jigsaw of poverty, the city’s poorest denizens eeking out a living as best they can. What new insight or perspective can we find inside these neighborhoods?

Favelas: Architecture of Survival seeks to look more closely at what those walls mean to the people who live behind them.

Brazilian photographer Pedro Lobo applies a background in architecture to his photography, focussing on how people create homes and are also influenced by the forms they construct.

One of his other major works, Imprisoned Spaces, for example, examines the interiors of prisons in Medellín, Colombia, and São Paulo.

Lobo’s work is currently on exhibit in Charleston, South Carolina, where he is artist-in-residence at both the Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art and College of Charleston.

View more selections from the portfolio on Lobo’s official website.

Out My Window: Documentary Film Looks Inside High-Rise Life

OUT MY WINDOW IS A 360-DEGREE DOCUMENTARY offering a glimpse into the lives of highrise residents in 13 cities around the world. All you need is a drag-on-the-mouse or a press of the right/left arrows and you’re twirling around another space, another city, and looking out another window than your own. This is panorama-technology put to perfect use for social awareness.

The film is the first with an international theme to emerge from the National Film Board of Canada’s Highrise project, a multi-year, multi-media, collaborative documentary project.

Director Katerina Cizek worked as part of a team of journalists, photographers, and filmmakers to put together these mini-features, complete with soundtrack and playlists from independent musicians. The residents narrate their own stories.

On the landing page, you’re met with stacked-up, concrete windows; you, the viewer, can break the “fourth wall” and meet the residents, like David, who staged a spoken-word festival in apartments in Havana.

Out My Window features 49 stories (a total of 90 minutes of material) from all corners of the world, including Chicago, Johannesburg, Prague, and Istanbul. Watch the films at Highrise.

A Short Film About War: By the People, For the People

© Thomson & Craighead

A SHORT FILM ABOUT WAR is a video installation by British artists Thomson & Craighead, created entirely of pictures gathered from photo sharing community Flickr, with spoken text from citizen and military bloggers.

The film plays out on two side-by-side “screens”: on the left are still photos of conflict zones around the world, those places we associate first and foremost with war: Iraq, Afghanistan, Rwanda, Sudan, the DRC, the Gaza Strip. On the right, all the bits and pieces that inform our information-obsessed age, links to Flickr, Blogspot, and even GPS.

The bloggers’ is all first-hand experience, such as what it’s like to take a shower with the sound of far-off gunfire; other times they reveal their most innermost feelings, like the American soldier whose marriage is falling apart.

© Thomson & Craighead

There’s nothing groundbreaking about these images in particular; they’ve all been seen before on TV news, online, and of course, through blogs and Flickr. But around the film’s midpoint, two extraordinary things happen: as we flick and jump around the globe from location to location, suddenly there’s more images than we can process—a quick montage of photos we barely glimpse—then we’re in outer space. Now there is detachment from the big blue marble and its continuing conflicts. We’re hanging about the international space station, or floating alongside the space shuttle.

© Thomson & Craighead

But we can’t escape Earth’s problems so easily. Soon we’re grounded again with the next conflict area.

The film captures the vagaries of how we now process images, sounds, and information: quick bites here and there from this or that, never lingering too long on any one thing. So how does modern technology affect how we feel about subjects like conflict and politics, when we don’t, or won’t, give it the time it needs? What can our fragmented attention understand about the men, women, and children who face conflict every day?

There is a full-streaming version of A Short Film About War at Thomson & Craighead’s official website.

The Unseen Faces Behind The News: One Photographer’s Journey

“THE POWER OF IMAGES TO CHALLENGE ONE’S REALITY, and hopefully evoke change” is how Australian photographer Conor Ashleigh describes his work. His photos focus on underreported environmental, political and social issues.

In “The Brick Kilns of Bhaktapur,” Ashleigh documents the exploitation of child labor at a rapidly growing brick production center outside Kathmandu, where children as young as 12 work for less than $2US a day:

Image: © Conor Ashleigh

The story of how coffee is grown and harvested is the subject of Ashleigh’s story, “The Journey of Coffee in Timor-Leste.” In this photo, factory workers sort coffee in Dili:

Image: © Conor Ashleigh

And earlier this year Ashleigh traveled to Al-Arish, the closest city to the the Rafah crossing between southern Gaza and Egypt. Ashleigh’s personal essay, “My Journey to Gaza,” is a thoughtful reflection on his experiences documenting life in-and-around Gaza, including the tunnels:

Image: © Conor Ashleigh

You can view these portfolios, as well as photographs taken in Papua New Guinea, India, and Australia, at Conor Ashleigh’s website. Read an interview with Ashleigh at Green Left Weekly.

Life Inside Guantanamo Bay: The Photographs of Edmund Clark

edmund-clark-guantanamo-bay-if-the-lights-go-out

© Edmund Clark

IF THE LIGHT GOES OUT is the title of award-winning photographer Edmund Clark’s photographs of life inside the Guantanamo camps. His series of photographs explores both the interiors of the detainee camps and the homes of ex-detainees. The photographs are on exhibit at several shows in London this month, including one at PhotoFusion.

Clark’s photographs address imprisonment, both physical and psychological, within a theme of “home.” He shoots interior spaces and the objects within; the viewer is forced to think of the men who occupy those spaces and what their lives are like. In a photo essay for Lens Culture, Clark writes,

Rather than documents to monumentalize the historical fact of the camps, these images illustrate three experiences of home: the naval base at Guantanamo which is home to the American community and of which the prison camps are just a part; the complex of camps where the detainees have been held; and the homes, new and old, where the former detainees now find themselves trying to rebuild their lives.

edmund-clark-guantanamo-bay-if-the-lights-go-out

© Edmund Clark

Along with the photographs are “Letters to Omar,” a selection of the letters written to Omar Deghayes, who was held at Guantanamo for six years before his release in December 2007. Over 60 of the letters will be included in Edmund Clark’s new book of Guantanamo photographs.

View a slideshow of Guantanamo: If the Lights Go Out at Edmund Clark’s official website.

Visit Reprieve UK to read about their work with Guantanamo prisoners and others held in secret prisons.

Social Documentary Photography: Bringing Awareness and Change

Social documentary photography seeks to bring attention to social issues around the world. Unlike news photography, sites for social documentary photographers have a point of view and believe they can advance a cause, such as human and civil rights, and bring awareness and change through the power of photography.

Here are three sites where you can see the work of photographers practicing activism through photography, including:

    1. Socialdocumentary.net

Afghanistan-national-police-Taliban

© Marielle van Uitert/socialdocumentary.net


Socialdocumentary.net is a member organization for photographers, NGOs, students, photo editors, and the general public. The site currently features over 200 exhibits, and you can view photos by country or photographer. The works featured are as diverse as the Tea Party in America to urban horses.

    2. FiftyCrows

The FiftyCrows Foundation combines photo exhibitions with action and media campaigns. The 2009-2010 exhibition season features the work of seven photographers, including Stephanie Sinclair’s “The Bride Price: The Consequences of Early Marriage Worldwide.”

early marriage stephanie sinclair

© 2010 Stephanie Sinclair

    3. Collective Lens

Collective Lens is a site for individuals and nonprofits to upload their photos and promote a cause or bring awareness to an issue. The site is also developing a gallery of student work and is reaching out to classrooms to promote photojournalism and social change.

Oliver-Albino-elder-Sudanese

© Acrossfourcontinents.org

The work of these photographers might anger, shock, or inspire action—they are voices speaking through images.

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