Showing posts with label Syria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Syria. Show all posts

April 01, 2016

Friday Round Up - 1st April, 2016

This week it’s all about books – three books are reviewed Erika Diettes’ Memento Mori: Testament to Life; Tanya Habjouqa’s Occupied Pleasures and Olof Jalbro’s Refuge.

Erika Diettes – Memento Mori: Testament to Life

Imagine your husband, child, lover, wife, or best friend abducted without warning or cause, tortured and murdered simple for being in the wrong place at the wrong time during a political conflict that no one really understands. Then imagine having no way to honour this person or their life because their body has either been mutilated beyond recognition or dumped where you cannot go.

This horror is what thousands of people live with everyday in Colombia where the armed conflict between the government, the guerillas and the drug lords have claimed over a quarter of a million people this past fifty years.

Colombian artist and anthropologist Erika Diettes has made it her life’s work to honour the victims creating four elaborate bodies of work that come together in Memento Mori: Testament to Life, an exquisite double volume with slipcase that does justice to this phenomenal collection.

I first interviewed Diettes in 2013 about her body of work Shrouds/Sudarios, which features haunting portraits of women as they remember watching loved ones tortured in front of them. These portraits are printed on a grand scale on linen to resemble shrouds. I remember seeing this exhibition hanging from the high ceiling of the Mining Exchange in Ballarat (for the Ballarat International Foto Biennale) and walking between the portraits that swayed in the breeze, the light fabric wrapping itself gently around my shoulders and sending shivers down my spine. I saw it again the following year in a church in Sydney (for Head On Photo Festival) and this time felt it was even more moving given the venue, the hushed tones of visitors, the candles lit in sympathy. 




Above: Shrouds/Sudarios

Diettes has continued to work on this project creating additional bodies of work that fit together to tell an extraordinary story that is at once politically and socially relevant, but also deeply personal – Diettes has spent many hours interviewing each of these women. This is a story beyond the horrors of conflict. It is a story of humanity, of loss and of love, a story that is underpinned by Diettes’ commitment to give voice to the victims.

“My work is inspired by the extremely complex social, political, and cultural situation that exists in Colombia, along with theoretical questions raised by my reaction to the unrelenting violence that my country has experienced for decades. I have decided to bear witness to that violence, and to give the victims – both those murdered and disappeared and their survivors – voice through my art," she says.

“Because the work originates in the direct testimonies of the families of the victims as well as in objects belonging to them, it assumes a significance that transcends aesthetic considerations. I create a physical and emotional space within both the images and their installations that is recognizable to the mourners as a memorial and that is also accessible to other viewers, allowing them to go beyond the idea of a violent event and to identify with the humanity of the people affected.”
In Drifting Away/Rio Abajo, images of artifacts of the disappeared – a shirt, shoe, pair of reading glasses – are photographed in water and then suspended in glass. In Relics/Relicarios personal effects are embedded in blocks of polymer resin that resemble tombstones. These two bodies of work are joined by Shrouds/Sudarios in one volume of Memento Mori: Testament to Life. In the other volume is the final body of work that brings all three together in photographs of these memorials displayed in cathedrals and churches around the world, lit with the candles of mourners and visitors. 




Above: Relics/Relicarios






Above: Drifting Away/Rio Abajo

This is an amazing body of work and I am honoured to have Memento Mori: Testament to Life in my collection.

Publisher: George F. Thompson Publishing
Artist Website: Erika Diettes

Tanya Habjouqa – Occupied Pleasures

Over four million Palestinians live in the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem. The inhabitants of this region have lived with conflict for decades and there is a well-entrenched narrative around life here.

But in Occupied Pleasures, published by FotoEvidence, photographer Tanya Habjouqa, who has Circassian and Jordanian roots and grew up in the US in Texas, takes an unconventional approach to capturing the daily lives of those Palestinians living in the shadow of conflict.

Here we see women practising yoga on a mountainside; men pumping iron; a woman traversing the tunnels to attend a party, carrying flowers for the hostess; a family picnicking on the beach; a young girl surfing. In these pictures are humour and irony, laughter and sorrow, stories told through Habjouqa's unique insight; it is obvious she has a background in anthropology. She is also a founding member of Rawiya photo collective, founded by five female photographers from the Middle East.












All images (C) Tanya Habjouqa

Having worked as a war photojournalist, Habjouqa says with Occupied Pleasures she was looking for a new way to tell the Palestinian story that didn’t traverse the familiar “hackneyed tropes”.

"I am always grappling for an angle to shake up what so sadly are dogmatic, reductive views of this place…every story I have done was from an angle of bringing a fresh analysis, or new gateway into this place...having covered some dark events in the Region, Palestinians continue to amaze me, how they keep their humanity."

Habjouqa says Occupied Pleasures was a departure, "something far more intimate than anything I have ever done before. I had something to say in what I was documenting, a personal stake. It was for my children, a push back against misrepresentation. A move from traditional documentary to what is being called new documentary, and an attempt to say something different".

Occupied Pleasures is like a breath of fresh air in the rhetoric on conflict in the Middle East and is another title from FotoEvidence that pushes beyond the stereotypical boundaries to bring new insights.

Published by FotoEvidence

Olof Jarlbro - Refuge

One of the true pleasures of writing this blog is the opportunity to review books from around the globe. Often a publisher will write to me having discovered my work online and offer to send me a book that ordinarily I might not have seen. That was the case with Refuge by Swedish photographer Olof Jarlbro, which came to my attention quite unexpectedly.

Refuge documents those who have fled Syria and find themselves confined now to the refugee camps in Bulgaria. Why Bulgaria? Jarlbro says his choice was premised on the fact that this destination was one of the cheapest offered by smugglers.








“There were no wealthy Syrians who fled to Bulgaria. The refugees there were already economically fragile and from different minorities, that is why their stories felt important to me.”

Refuge begins with a story of Aleppo, the shattered lives of its inhabitants, as well as the shattered buildings. Jarlbro focuses on the people and their environs. In the quietness of these strong black and white images, many of which evoke thoughts of a ghost town, Jarlbro tells the story of what is lost juxtaposed against the strangeness of what has become daily life; a woman queues up to buy bread, a soldier calls to a stray cat, a man sits texting with his weapon over his shoulder, a child holds a gun in his open hand.

The second part of Refuge takes us into Bulgaria where refugees spend days, weeks, months on end faced with uncertainty. Housed in rough accommodation, the boredom and frustration is clear, but life goes on; a baby is fed, washing is hung on barren trees, tablets and mobile phones keep people connected, children sleep, mothers prepare meals, men play cards.



All images (C) Olof Jarlbro

Refuge follows Jarlbro’s book Syria: The War Within, which he shot in 2012 after entering the country illegally. He says, “During my first hours in Aleppo, we drove towards the bombs, the smoke, the frontline. Instinctively I wanted to go the opposite way – toward safety and security…I imagined war as entering the gates of Hell, but adding madness and the unthinkable to it”.

He says that experience gave him some inkling of what those fleeing were running from. But he also knew what they were leaving behind – full lives, homes, friends, family - a torment beyond understanding. Jarlbro says travelling to Bulgaria completed the picture allowing him to also document what the refugees were fleeing towards…an uncertain future, in a foreign country with little means or support, but a future that could still offer hope.

These aren’t easy photographs to look at, but then the situation isn’t easy either and in a small way through the act of looking we can connect and understand what these people face; for they are people first and foremost before the label refugee is given and here Jarlbro has given them the opportunity to be heard.

Publisher: Rough Dog Press

March 18, 2016

Friday Round Up - 18th March, 2016

This week Friday Round Up kicks off with The Lovers, a beautiful series of portraits of couples that have been together for 50 years or more by Lauren Fleishman. Also this week Muhammed Muheisen's portraits of child refugees from Syria, a touching story on an Indian dog rescuer, alarming statistics on the issue of trust in the media and other interesting articles.

The Lovers - Lauren Fleishman

This is a heart-warming series of images, which feature in the book of the same name along with interviews of those couples pictured. When I first saw this series last year I immediately thought of my grandparents who were together for almost 60 years and spent every day with each other working in their wine shop. Theirs was a love I imagined few would experience. Lauren's beautiful book is both nostalgic and uplifting. I am delighted to share some of her images here. To see more visit Lauren's website.









Muhammed Muheisen – Portraits of Syria's Child Refugees in Jordan

Rakan Raslan, 11, from Hama. “I used to go to the school back in Hama,” Raslan said. “I used to have friends there. Our home was destroyed in the war and we had to flee to Jordan.” Rakan said that without an education, his future is in doubt. “The best I can become is a driver".

This week TIME magazine ran a series of portraits by Muhammed Muheisen, who has been photographing conflict for the past 15 years. I met up with Muhammed at Visa Pour L'Image a couple of years ago and we spoke about his work. At the time he told me: “I was born in Jerusalem and raised in conflict, so it has always been part of my life". Given his own experience, it is not surprising he is drawn to telling the stories of those who are also growing up in conflict.

At college he studied journalism and political science, “but my passion is photography” he said. In 2001 he got a chance to work with Associated Press (AP) as a journalist. “But I also had my camera and I found myself taking pictures. For me a picture is worth millions of words…I don’t want to offend anyone, I studied journalism, but for me I found a connection with photography and storytelling”. 


Mariam Aloush, 8, from Homs. "I remember our home in Syria and my school there. I just want to go back".


Zahra al-Jassim, 10, from Hama. "I dream of going back to Syria to see my friends Raghd, Halima, and Najwa". 

Covering conflict zones for AP as a photographer Muhammed said he began to think about what happened to the people he’d photographed once the stories dropped from the news headlines. “I started to take steps away from news events”. The more he travelled, the more he was drawn to the human side of conflict, to the contrast, to those moment where life goes on despite what’s happening around it. 

These portraits not only show the faces of some of the youngest victims of the Syrian conflict who now call the tent camps near Mafraq, in Jordan home. They put a human face on the conflict and give these children the opportunity to tell their stories in both pictures and words (because words are important too in putting images into context!). To see more images visit TIME.

Meghanadan A S - The Dog Saviour



In this photo essay Indian photographer Meghanadan A S captures the work of Arun Pasare and his wife Suvarna as they care for stray dogs found on the streets of Pune, India. The couple has been looking after, and feeding, strays for the past nine years and their act of kindness is in contrast to the way stray dogs are usually treated. 







December 04, 2015

Friday Round Up - 4 December, 2015

This week begins the December Book Reviews feature. For the next three weeks around six books will be reviewed each Friday in the lead to Christmas. This week a diverse selection from the US, Australia, the Arctic Circle, Bangladesh and Syria - Norma I. Quintana - Circus: A Traveling Life; Evgenia Arbugaeva - Tiksi; Issa Touma – Women We Have Not Lost Yet; Berylouise Mitchell - The Birdsville Cup; Khaled Hasan - Leave Me Alone; and Ron Haviv - The Lost Rolls.

Book Reviews:
Norma I. Quintana – Circus: A Traveling Life


My deep love of history and curiosity about the world are the two fundamentals that continue to draw me to documentary photography. In today's world photography is so many things to so many people, but for me it is a rich source of information, a way to investigate the way others live, a conduit for insight, an opportunity for compassion and understanding. It is also a magic carpet on which to ride into the unknown and return with new knowledge and a greater appreciation for the larger world.

Long-term documentary studies are the stories that really engage me, especially in today's fast-paced world where everyone is in a rush to the finish, resulting in many stories being half-baked. I see a host of work produced each year, much of which reminds me of an underdone dish - all the ingredients are there, but in the frantic desire to get the plate on the table, some aspects are left raw, or not integrated, leaving the diner less than satisfied and disappointed because they know it could be so much better with a little more time and patience.

Norma I. Quintana's Circus: A Traveling Life is a beautifully prepared dish, created over a decade. Her commitment to the story of this one-ring travelling circus has resulted in a rich, multi-layered insight into a world few of us can imagine, and even fewer will ever live.

On the surface Circus is a story of a tight knit community dedicated to its craft and a way of life that is becoming less sustainable in the digital age. Yet it is a story that goes so much deeper and that’s the appeal for me. In Circus Quintana’s photographs gently reveal the bonds between performers and the admiration of parents and children for the other’s talents as well as the drudgery of the daily grind, and the euphoria of performance. It is a complete picture that can only have been told over an extended period of time. 









Photographed in black and white, on film using only available light, Circus is incredibly satisfying as a documentary body of work. Quintana combines more formal portraiture as well as casual behind-the-scenes moments showing the performers as artists as well as everyday people. This is not a story that could have been shot by dropping in for a couple of weeks and then disappearing.

Other reviewers have compared Quintana's work to the likes of Diane Arbus, Bruce Davidson and Mary Ellen Mark and while these comparisons are obvious, Quintana also has a strong voice of her own, a visual signature that conveys the intimacy and trust she earned with her subjects. This is one of the true benefits of long term work; the opportunity to really get to know those you are photographing, for it is through mutual respect and the sharing of lives that the heart of a story can be found. 








© All images Norma I Quintana

Circus: A Traveling Life

Evgenia Arbugaeva – Tiksi 


“Once upon a time in Siberia, on the shores of the Arctic Ocean, in a warm bed in a small town, a little girl woke up from a dream. It was morning, but it was still dark out, for the little town was so far north that the sun would not show itself for many months. They called this the Polar Night…The town was called Tiksi…” 

Evgenia Arbugaeva was born in Tiksi, a Yakutian sea port in the Russian Arctic. Her family moved away when she was young, but as an adult she returned in 2010 to once again walk the frozen tundra. In Tiksi she recreates many of the scenes from her childhood, as well as capturing the lives of those who still reside in the remote community with its breathtaking landscape. 















Arbugaeva’s work first came to my attention earlier this year with her series Weatherman. I have long been drawn to photographs and documentaries of the Arctic, a world so foreign to an Antipodean. The ethereal hues of the icy waters, the vast whiteness, the stark cold, the months of darkness all hold fascination. This book is satisfying on many levels and is a visual treat. 






© All images Evgenia Arbugaeva

Publisher: The Eyes

Issa Touma – Women We Have Not Lost Yet 


I met up with Syrian photographer Issa Touma at Paris Photo and bought his book Women We Have Not Lost Yet. This book features portraits of young Syrian women dressed in their daily clothes – modern, young women wearing make up, fashionable clothing, and jewellery. I really like the design of this book. Each portrait is split in two, with the picture divided at the eyes – we never see the women’s eyes. Rather we see the top of their heads above the eyebrows, or from the middle of their nose down. Without the eyes to draw focus you really have to look to see. The part portraits are presented in oversized A4 format, the top of one page featuring the first portrait of eyebrows to top of head, running across the top of the page, the remainder left crisp white. On the next page there is a strip of white across the top of the page that signifies the division of the portrait, and also points to an unwritten future.

Each portrait comes with a short story in the words of the sitter, which makes the book even more relevant and gives a unique insight into the thoughts and resolve of these young women in the face of adversity.












© All images Issa Touma


This series was shot during the week of the “Great Attack” in Aleppo on 26 April, 2015. In that week these young women, of various ethnicities and religious backgrounds, sought refuge in Touma’s Le Pont Gallery. The majority were former participants of Art Camping, a collaborative project Touma began in 2012 in response to the outbreak of the Syrian conflict. Touma believes that “art is essential for surviving the horrors of war and preserving the principles of an inclusive society that are threatened by political and religious fanaticism. This book documents the photo sessions held at Le Pont during the week of the Great Attack. It is a cry for freedom from the women that Syrian society has not lost yet – to death, exile or oppression”.

In 1996 Touma started Le Pont Gallery and the following year the International Photography Festival Aleppo. You can also view an interview with Issa Touma - Postcards from Syria

Publisher: Paradox & André Frère Éditions

Berylouise Mitchell - The Birdsville Cup 


Most Australians are familiar with the Birdsville Cup, which is oft referred to as the ‘Melbourne Cup of the Outback’. This two day racing carnival held annually in September in the remote outback town of Birdsville in Queensland - a mere 3200 kilometres west of Brisbane, literally in the middle of nowhere near the intersection of the Queensland, NSW and Northern Territory borders - has long held fascination for Australians, especially those city slickers who romanticise the outback and its stories, but Birdsville has one of the harshest climates on the planet. Its permanent population of around 120 swells to nearly 7000 when the Cup is on with visitors pitching tents, sleeping in vans and under the wings of light aircraft as there isn't any accommodation for rent.

As a student, photographer Berylouise Mitchell documented every aspect of the race. That was 25 years ago. To mark this anniversary she has published a book through crowd funding - The Birdsville Cup - donating 100 copies to the Birdsville community to raise funds for the Royal Flying Doctor Service, which is an essential service for those living remotely. 



















These black and white photographs are an important historical record and the story they tell is worth knowing. In the book Mitchell also makes special mention, in words and pictures, of the small towns she passed through on her way to Birdsville including Quilpie, Windorah and Betoota and the characters she met. Mitchell’s journey took her through some of the most remote towns in Australia and her gritty black and white images convey the isolation, dust and heat that is ever present. This is a unique slice of Australian history. 







© All images Berylouise Mitchell



Khaled Hasan – Leave Me Alone 


Shot in Bangladesh over a three-year period (2010-2013), Khaled Hasan’s documentation of the victims of acid attacks - Leave Me Alone - is not an easy book to view, but it tells an important and unfortunately a common story among those who live in the rural provinces of Bangladesh. Many of the victims of acid attacks are young women who are left disfigured and often blind, their opportunity for a ‘normal’ life stolen – in the majority of attacks acid is thrown in the woman’s face leaving permanent damage. But it is not only women who suffer. Men are also victims of acid attacks. 









© All images Khaled Hasan

In Bangladesh there are scant medical or social resources to deal with those who are burned and maimed with many left to live with horrendous pain and emotional and physical scarring. Yet Hasan's book is not just about the victims, but about the human spirit and the strength of those pictured to forge ahead with the hope for a better life.

Published by KAUNAS PHOTO.

Ron Haviv - The Lost Rolls

VII co-founder and award-winning photojournalist Ron Haviv was also in Paris to launch his new book and magazine ‘The Lost Rolls’, which literally features photographs that Ron re-discovered when he found around 200 rolls of film he hadn’t processed. “There might be even more,” he smiles.

Of the 200 a number were blank, and some had only one frame worthwhile using. In the end there were about 140 rolls that were usable. Robert Peacock and Ron edited the photographs together basing the selection process on “the story behind the photograph, or lack of, and the actual photograph itself. Some had varying degrees of degradation and became more than what they were originally also,” Ron explains.







He says it was quite fascinating rediscovering images or finding other versions of photographs that had been published years ago and were quite well known. “There are also images here that I don’t know where I was, or who the people are or why I was photographing them. While that’s interesting in terms of a sense of mystery, it’s also disconcerting. And then there are images that I remember taking but never saw or couldn’t find. Some of those memories and adventures are now more complete. But I’ve also now created all sorts of other incomplete scenarios and I really now want to know what those images are”.








© All images Ron Haviv

This is Ron’s fourth book and his first self-publishing venture. He says nowadays it is a more complicated process to find a traditional publisher to take on a project and often that involves the photographer coming up with a substantial amount of money, usually around $25-30,000. With this project there was the additional cost of developing the film also. Ron teamed up with Blurb to produce ‘The Lost Rolls’ in a venture that helped both parties; it allowed Blurb to showcase its new technologies and Ron to develop the film and have control of the distribution and marketing.

“The stigma that existed with self-publishing even three or four years ago is no longer realistic. Distribution now is pretty easy, it’s been democratised and that was one of the reasons you’d go to a traditional publisher. The second would be the public relations around the book. Having done traditional publishing I’ve found they’re often terrible at that. So what’s the difference? It’s distribution and PR. So if you can do that as a photographer your book is going to be successful.”

The quality of the book is impressive, and Ron tells that it is printed offset, not digitally printed on demand. That’s an exciting development, making offset printing more affordable for self-publishers and raising the quality available. Blurb also offers warehousing and orders are made directly. The photographer chooses the production price and their mark up and Blurb manages the whole process. It doesn’t get any easier than that. PR is up to the photographer and as many today have large social media networks, getting the message out is relatively straightforward.

Ron chose to print around 1500 copies of ‘The Lost Rolls’ hardcover book. Given it was a Blurb project, Ron also had the opportunity to produce a magazine so Blurb could show off the other technologies available to photographers. “The magazine is really exciting, probably even more exciting than the books because it is obviously less expensive to produce and you have the ability to do a magazine of any size”.

“In differentiation to the book, we approached the Lost Rolls magazine more as an editorial – text on photographs, captions with the images. It was a cool way to do something different.”

Ron says the magazine concept opens up a whole lot of opportunities. VII is planning to produce a series of magazines. In fact this weekend just past, Ron and VII photographer Ashley Gilbertson presented at a conference in Boston and had available a VII magazine featuring the refugee work the agency’s photographers have done recently. “People want to have something in their hand. It’s great to have the iPad, but people still – not the masses but enough of an audience – want to flip through a magazine, they want to have something tangible”.

‘The Lost Rolls’ has both a French and English version, with different covers. Ron says that’s another benefit of self-publishing with Blurb, the ability to on the fly upload a new PDF of the book and adapt it for various markets.


Ron in Paris October 2015 © Alison Stieven-Taylor

“Blurb is a very smart company and Eileen (Gittins the founder) is quite brilliant in what she’s done,” Ron says. “I think this is my best book.”