September 04, 2015

Friday Round Up - 4 September, 2015

This week on Friday Round Up - Getty Images announces its grant winners at Visa Pour l'Image, Photoville gears up in New York and Photo Shanghai has its second outing.

But before turning to those stories, I want to write briefly about this heartbreaking image that rocked the world.

(Dogan News Agency / European Pressphoto Agency)

Nothing underpins the capacity of a photograph to move public opinion than that of the body of 3 year old Syrian boy Aylan Kurdi, washed up on a beach in Turkey. This photograph has been published around the world and shared many thousands of times on social media. It has made millions question their role as a citizen of the world and to call for action from their governments. It is heartbreaking, yet the horror of this reality is galvanising people across nations.

It has also given the media an opportunity to take back their place as the Fourth Estate, if only temporarily. Newspapers across Britain have run the photograph shaming the British government who is anticipated to make an announcement that it will take more refugees. In the US newspapers are also pushing for a greater refugee intake.

Media are also justifying why they chose to publish the photograph. Here is an excerpt from an editorial published in the Los Angeles Times written by Kim Murphy, Assistant Managing Editor, Foreign and National News who said it was "imperative" the paper publish this photograph:

We have written stories about migrants suffocated in trucks, run over by trains, drowned in capsized boats, but these tragedies have unfolded largely unwitnessed; here was a boy...whose fate forced anyone who saw him to confront the magnitude of the migrant crisis unfolding in Europe and the Middle East. A crisis that our nation, through the wars it has fought in the region, had a hand in igniting. A human drama that has seen European nations struggle to confront the streams of refugees, some of them fleeing horrific violence, who have turned up pleading at their doors — while the U.S. admitted just 36 Syrian refugees in fiscal 2013.” Click here to read the full story.

The Washington Post's Beirut Bureau Chief, Liz Sly, shared the photo of Aylan on Twitter on Wednesday after seeing it on a Turkish news site. Here's what she said: 

“Instantly I received a huge response, mostly from people who said they too were deeply moved by the image. Some people, however, criticized me — and those retweeting me — for sharing the picture at all. This response puzzled me...How many photos of dead Syrian children show up on social media every day? Don’t people know what has been happening in Syria?

And then it occurred to me — perhaps they don’t.

My colleagues and I have been writing about Syria’s war for four years, about the desperation of the refugees who fled the country and the 250,000 people, including children, who have died over the course of the conflict. Some of us, Syrian and foreign journalists, have died, too, trying to tell their stories.

Yet it has seemed that no one really paid much attention — at least, not in terms of seriously trying to solve the problem, seriously trying to help. If it takes photographs of dead children to make people realize children are dying, so be it."
You can read the full story here. 

May the good in humanity prevail.

Awards:
2015 Getty Images Grants for Editorial Photography 

The winners for this year's Getty Grants were announced at Visa Pour l'Image yesterday:

Salvatore Esposito for What is Missing?

(C) Salvatore Esposito/Getty Images Editorial Grants recipient 2015

(C) Salvatore Esposito/Getty Images Editorial Grants recipient 2015

(C) Salvatore Esposito/Getty Images Editorial Grants recipient 2015

(C) Salvatore Esposito/Getty Images Editorial Grants recipient 2015

(C) Salvatore Esposito/Getty Images Editorial Grants recipient 2015

This project explores the complicated social layers of Naples, telling the story of the city by analysing the feeblest and neediest social structures within the city. The work is captured with a desire to show the negligence that has arisen as a result of the city’s ruling class.

Javier Arcenillas for Latidoamerica 

(C) Javier Arcenillas/Getty Images Editorial Grants recipient 2015

(C) Javier Arcenillas/Getty Images Editorial Grants recipient 2015

(C) Javier Arcenillas/Getty Images Editorial Grants recipient 2015

(C) Javier Arcenillas/Getty Images Editorial Grants recipient 2015

(C) Javier Arcenillas/Getty Images Editorial Grants recipient 2015


Honduras is considered one of the most violent places on earth. Every day on the streets of Honduras’ cities murders, robberies and violence are commonplace. This project aims to document the axis of uncontrolled violence in Honduras as social and political factors aggressively feed the issue.

Mojgan Ghanbari for Zanan 

(C) Mojgan Ghanbari/Getty Images Editorial Grants recipient 2015

(C) Mojgan Ghanbari/Getty Images Editorial Grants recipient 2015

(C) Mojgan Ghanbari/Getty Images Editorial Grants recipient 2015
(C) Mojgan Ghanbari/Getty Images Editorial Grants recipient 2015


Iran, with a population of 77 million, is the third highest populated country in the Middle East, with a 50 percent female demographic and over 60 percent of the population under the age of 35. Profound changes took place in the country as a result of the Islamic revolution in 1979, which had a significant impact on the lives of women. Legislative changes to Islamic rules resulted in further restrictions being imposed on women; restrictions on community participation, enforcement of the mandatory hijab and the Family Protection Law. Despite every effort by the State to convey a positive image of Shia Muslim Iran, there are still many clauses that limit women and their civil rights. Women are legally prohibited from the presidency, and are discriminated against in senior leadership positions, judgeships and educational fields; inheritance laws are significantly prejudiced against women.

Matt Eich for Carry Me Ohio 

(C) Matt Eich/Getty Images Editorial Grants recipient 2015

(C) Matt Eich/Getty Images Editorial Grants recipient 2015

(C) Matt Eich/Getty Images Editorial Grants recipient 2015
(C) Matt Eich/Getty Images Editorial Grants recipient 2015


Heroin has seen a resurgence across the United States in recent years, but it is keenly prevalent in Ohio. In 2010, 315 people in Ohio died in heroin-related deaths. By 2012 that number soared to 725. The state's response has been wide-ranging, with new laws creating stricter penalties for drug traffickers and creative ideas to expand treatment and needle-exchange programs. Although Ohio is at the vanguard of drug-prevention policy, the state's efforts appear to have their limits. Statistics show heroin is winning.

This year Getty Images received almost 400 applications from 78 countries. Each photojournalist will receive US$10,000 as well as collaborative editorial support from Getty Images. Getty Images Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer Jonathan Klein said, “The 2015 Getty Images Grants for Editorial Photography recipients exemplify the dedication, determination and integrity that define the photojournalism community. We strongly believe in the power of imagery to move the world and I am extremely proud that our grants programme continues to provide emerging and established photojournalists with the freedom to bring global attention to complex issues that otherwise may remain unseen.”

Getty Images has also announced that one of the Getty Images Editorial Grants will be renamed The David Laidler Memorial Award, in honour of former employee, the late David Laidler, who passed away last month. David was instrumental in bringing the Getty Images Grants for Editorial Photography programme to life.

Festivals & Fairs:

Photoville - New York City



Photoville is the largest annual photographic event in New York City with exhibitions housed in re-purposed shipping containers that create a modular venue in Brooklyn Bridge Park. In addition to the exhibitions are workshops and nightly screenings and events in the famed Photoville Beer Garden. This year there are more than 70 ‘container’ exhibitions as well as those works featured on the FENCE in Brooklyn Bridge Park, Boston, Atlanta and Houston. Here's a peek at what you can expect from this year's program:


Brenda Ann Kenneally’s Upstate Girls: Unraveling Collar City, an examination of post-industrial America through photographs, film and collected ephemera of young people as they come of age on one block in North Troy, NY 


Daniel Berehulak’s Scenes From The Ebola Crisis, which covers his four-month, Pulitzer Prize-winning coverage of the Ebola crisis in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea presented by The New York Times.


Eugene Richards’ Red Ball of a Sun Slipping Down, an examination of life in the impoverished Arkansas Delta forty years ago and today. The exhibition interweaves old black-and-white photographs with recent color photographs and a short story. 


Jeff Sheng's Fearless, for which he photographed over 200 LGBT student athletes between 2003 and 2015 


Matt Black’s The Geography of Poverty, an exhibition of images collected during a three-month, 30 state trip on which Black photographed some of America’s most destitute communities



Radcliffe Roye’s When Living Is a Protest, documenting the everyday reality of those living in the struggle for racial equality 


Stephanie Sinclair’s Too Young to Wed, an exhibition of photographs documenting the millions of young girls who are forced into marriage.

Photoville 
10-20 September
Brooklyn Bridge Park 

Photo Shanghai Art Fair
Organised by the World Photography Organisation, the second edition of Photo Shanghai art fair features 50 international galleries and over 500 works of art. In addition Photo Shanghai also presents its education series, which includes a discussion panel on the role of photography in international museums with Christopher Phillips from ICP New York and Liu Heung Shing from ScOP, Shanghai. Last year the Fair attracted 25,000 visitors. 


(C) August Sander, Three Farmers, 1928. Courtesy of Time Space Gallery, Beijing


(C) Luo Yongjin, Otherness - Curtain, Henan, 2014. Courtesy of OFOTO & ANART, Shanghai


(C) Ormond Gigli, Girls in the Windows, New York, 1960. Courtesy of Staley-Wise Gallery, New York


(C) Terry O'Neill, Brigitte Bardot, Spain, 1971. Courtesy of BEETLES+HUXLEY


(C) YANG Fudong, The Light That I Feel 1, 2014. Courtesy of ShanghART Gallery, Shanghai

11-13 September
Photo Shanghai
Shanghai Exhibition Centre

August 28, 2015

Friday Round Up - 28 August, 2015

This week the 27th edition of Visa Pour l'Image opens in Perpignan, France, Murray Frederick's exhibitions open in Melbourne and Sydney and Ballarat International Foto Biennale hosts In Conversation with Sam Harris and Alison Stieven-Taylor.


Feature Festival:
Visa Pour l'Image

29 August - 13 September



The 27th edition of the world's longest standing, and most respected, photojournalism festival opens in Perpignan France with another impressive program of international exhibitions. Visa attracts professionals from around the world, and last year 2800 descended on the picturesque town of Perpignan near the Spanish border. Visa is not just for professionals and over the festival 187,000 people visited the exhibitions and more than 30,000 attended the evening screenings. This year 30 exhibitions and six screenings will showcase the diversity that is photojournalism in 2015. Here's a preview of some of the amazing work on show plus FotoEvidence Press launches three new books.

Exhibitions:

Somalia
Mohamed Abdiwahab 

A mother and child walking past the wreckage of a car bomb that killed one 
person and injured another. Wardhigley District, south of Mogadishu, February 27, 2015.
© Mohamed Abdiwahab / AFP


Syrian Refugees in the Middle East
Lynsey Addario

A Syrian man and his two daughters after entering Jordan at an unofficial border crossing. 
Sharjarh, Jordan, April 10, 2013.
© Lynsey Addario for The New York Times / Getty Images Reportage


The Ebola Epidemic
Daniel Berehulak

Monrovia, Liberia, August 31, 2014.
Esther Doryen (5) being carried to an ambulance prior to being taken to the
Ebola Treatment Center run by Doctors Without Borders. One week later she passed away.
© Daniel Berehulak for The New York Times / Getty Images Reportage


The Unravelling…Central African Republic
Marcus Bleasdale

Muslims waiting for trucks at PK12 after fleeing their homes. Christian anti-balaka 
forces were systematically attacking Muslim communities in the region.
January 23, 2014.
© Marcus Bleasdale / Human Rights Watch / National Geographic Magazine


Juan Manuel Castro Prieto

Nazaria Alpérez & Alejandra Checia. Santo Tomás, Chumbivilcas, Peru, 2009.
© Juan Manuel Castro Prieto / Agence VU’


Living with the Legacy of Hugo Chavez
Alejandro Cegarra

Caracas, Venezuela, November 19, 2013. Women shouting at opposition party 
supporters during a political demonstration outside the Venezuelan Parliament.
© Alejandro Cegarra / Getty Images Reportage


Facing Reality
Manoocher Deghati

Kunduz, Afghanistan, 2002. Two women on a horse-drawn taxi.
© Manoocher Deghati


Winner French of the Ville de Perpignan 
Rémi Ochlik Award 2015
Edouard Elias

Foreign Legion troops recently arrived and awaiting instructions.
Bria, Central African Republic, MISCA base (International Support Mission to the CAR), 
August 23, 2014
© Edouard Elias / Getty Images Reportage


From Kiev to Kobani
Bülent Kiliç

Near the southeastern town of Suruc, Sanliurfa province, Turkey, October 2, 2014. 
A Kurdish woman and her daughter wait after crossing from Syria into Turkey, 
with mortar fire on both sides.
© Bülent Kiliç / AFP

Spain's Housing Crisis
Andres Kudacki 
Carmen Martinez Ayuso (85) lost her apartment under foreclosure when her son 
lost his job and she could not pay the mortgage and high interest rates. Activists 
protested and clashed with riot police, but she was still evicted. 
Madrid, Spain, Friday, November 21, 2014.
© Andres Kudacki / AP


Amalio Barrul Gimenez and his family have been evicted. Amalio Barrul 
Gimenez (41), his pregnant wife Isabel Morales Bachiller (35) and their three 
children live on a low income, selling goods on the street and receiving benefits. 
For 18 months they lived in an apartment owned by Bankia Bank; they tried to 
negotiate a low rent, but the bank insisted on them being evicted. Madrid, Spain, 
Tuesday, June 24, 2014
© Andres Kudacki / AP

Nuclear Tourism
Gerd Ludwig

On a one-day visit to the Exclusion Zone, tourists have a few minutes for snapshots 
in front of the sarcophagus encasing Reactor 4. “This is as close as you can get, hurry up,”
says the tour guide who asks visitors to stay on the paved paths “as radiation is
substantially higher on the grass." Pripyat, Ukraine, 2013
© Gerd Ludwig / National Geographic Creative / National Geographic Magazine


In the Exclusion Zone, a park commemorating the homes abandoned was opened 
in 2011. The signs are the names of all the villages evacuated. Chernobyl, September 21, 2013.
© Gerd Ludwig / National Geographic Creative / National Geographic Magazine

The Congo River - Exploring a Legend
Pascal Maitre

The Congo River at Maluku where a giant barge transporting timber and passengers 
has just arrived from Kisangani. February, 2013.
© Pascal Maitre / Cosmos / National Geographic Magazine 



A JCM-Services boat (Jesus Christ Marvelous Services). Life on board and on 
the banks of the river downstream from Mbandaka and 100 km before Lissala. 
Villagers come to sell crocodiles (for $25 each) and poultry, and also to buy goods.
© Pascal Maitre / Cosmos / National Geographic Magazine

Assad's Syria
Sergey Ponomarev

Khalidiya district, Homs, Syria, Sunday June 15, 2014
Abu Hisham Abdel Karim and his family load their belongings into a taxi.
Taxis incongruously drive along deserted streets in ruins, bringing families to 
inspect what remains of their homes.
© Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times



Homs, Syria, Saturday June 14, 2014. A family walking through the rubble on 
the way to their apartment abandoned two years earlier, to see whether it is habitable. 
© Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times
A Long Walk Home
Eli Reed
Joy Sohn and friend. Harlem, New York, early 2000s.
© Eli Reed / Magnum Photos

2015 Winner of the Canon Female Photojournalist Award supported by ELLE Magazine
Anastasia Rudenko

At the neuropsychiatric boarding center for girls.
Summer of 2012, Elatma, Ryazan region, Russia.
© Anastasia Rudenko


In the village church, a patient who assists the priest every weekend. 
Summer of 2012, Elatma, Ryazan region, Russia.
© Anastasia Rudenko


Book Launches at Visa Pour l'Image:

Now in its fifth year, FotoEvidence Press will release three books at Visa on 3rd September at La Poudriere, rue Francois Rabelais, Perpignan

The Unravelling: Central African Republics
Marcus Bleasdale (Winner 2015 FotoEvidence Book Award)

Marcus Bleasdale (Winner 2015 FotoEvidence Book Award)

Occupied Pleasures
Tanya Habjouqa



Urban Cave
Andrea Star Reese



Exhibitions: Melbourne and Sydney

Murray Fredericks - Origins
New work from one of the world's most innovative photographers is on show at Melbourne's Arc One Gallery. These epic images, in both scale and majesty, are something to behold in real life. Murray's work is truly transformative. If you're in Melbourne put this on your must see list. 

 


45 Flinders Lane
Melbourne
Until 26 September

DYE 2


Between 2010 and 2013, Murray Fredericks and composer Tom Schutzinger explored the Greenland Icecap. The collaborative video work DYE 2, filmed inside an abandoned Cold War radar station, delivers an immersive and breathtaking video installation that takes the viewer to the edge of the world, space and time. 

Until 18 October
In Conversation with Murray, Tom and Alasdair Foster 5th September.

Ballarat International Foto Biennale
In Conversation 
Sam Harris with Alison Stieven-Taylor







© All photos Sam Harris

Come along to listen to Sam talk about his journey to The Middle of Somewhere, his new body of work and book, in a lively conversation with photography journalist and commentator Alison Stieven-Taylor.

Saturday 29th August 7.30pm 
Mr. Rede 
Geraldine's Room
203 Dana Street
Ballarat