February 05, 2016

Friday Round Up - 5 February, 2016

This week on Friday Round Up - the first of Alison Stieven-Taylor's monthly features on photojournalism for L'Oeil de la Photographie, 2016 Persephone Miel fellowship, panel discussion in New York on the roots of photojournalism, Head On Photo Awards open for entries, an environmental photo essay by Nima Taradji and links for some interesting weekend reading.

Editorial:
Photojournalism Now 
L'Oeil de la Photographie 
"There is no argument that photojournalism is in a state of transition, but what that means for the industry is open for discussion. Some view what’s happening as a crisis, and others as an opportunity for reinvention.  While there is an increasing number of photographers entering the field, there are less paid jobs and almost daily we hear stories of more newspapers and publications reducing their photography departments. But is the mainstream media critical to the photojournalist’s capacity to develop a reputation that delivers an audience and may affect change?"...to read the full story click here.  

The idea with these articles is to invite comment and expand the conversation so please get in touch if you feel you have something to contribute.

Fellowship:
Pulitzer Center On Crisis Reporting
The Persephone Miel fellowship honours the memory of the former Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting’s senior advisor of Internews, Persephone Miel who passed away in 2010 after a long battle with cancer. Persephone's legacy is to help media professionals outside the U.S. report on their home countries and bring their work to a broader international audience.

Over the past five years Persephone Miel fellows have reported from Africa, India, Pakistan, Russia, the Philippines and the Persian Gulf. Click here to find out how to apply. Deadline 1st March.

Talk: New York
PM New York Daily and the roots of photojournalism 

Bernie Aumuller

A panel discussion on PM New York Daily and the roots of photojournalism will be held this Saturday. Panelists are Brian Wallis, Curator of the Walther Collection and former Chief Curator of the ICP; Paul Milkman, scholar and author of PM: A New Deal in Journalism 1940-1948; Jason Hill, Associate Professor of Modern and Contemporary Art and Visual Culture at the University of Delaware and author of the forthcoming book Artist as Reporter: Weegee, Ad Reinhardt and the PM News Picture; and Laetitia Barrere, Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Curatorial Fellow at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The panel will be moderated by our Curatorial Director Anais Feyeux.

3-5pm Saturday 6th February
Steven Kasher Gallery
515 West 26th Street New York
Seats are limited

Prizes:
Head On Photo Awards
$50,000 in prizes across four categories - portrait, landscape, mobile and student. Entries close 28 February. Winning entries and finalists will be exhibited during the 2016 Head On Photo Festival 29 April to 22 May Click here for details. 

Photo Essay:
Nima Taradji - Shishmaref










Iranian photographer Nima Taradji’s photo essay on Shishmaref a remote village 30 miles south of the Arctic circle addresses the affects of climate change on the village’s 600 inhabitants. Native Eskimos have lived here for generations, but the island is sinking and they need to find somewhere else to live. To see more of his work click here. 

News is a product: A new report outlines best practices for news product managers


January 29, 2016

Friday Round Up - 29 January, 2016

This week on Friday Round Up -  a photo essay on Tijuana's AIDS crisis, plus three very different exhibitions - PM New York Daily: 1940-48 (New York), Francesa Woodman (Amsterdam) and Martin Parr (Sydney).

Photo Essay & Book:

Tomorrow Is a Long Time

Sergio Borrego, who helps run Tijuana's Albergue Las Memorias HIV/AIDS hospice, puts a net over the face of Pedro Robles, 51, to prevent flies bothering him as he dies of AIDS. Pedro arrived at Las Memorias with full-blown AIDS six days earlier, but because of bureaucratic delays in Tijuana's medical system he received no HIV medication and died without having seen a doctor. Malcolm Linton/Polaris

In Tijuana AIDS afflicts many of the city’s poorest who live along the Tijuana River Canal in slum conditions. Photographer Malcolm Linton and writer Jon Cohen spent two years documenting the impact of HIV/AIDS and their work appears in the book Tomorrow Is a Long Time.

In an interview with Mother Jones, Cohen said, "Our aim was to describe people's lives in enough detail to make you care about them, and these are people who for the most part live in the shadows of communities and are ignored or outright despised".

Linton said when the opportunity to do the book came up he had just retrained as a nurse and was about to give up photography as "the market had gotten so bad...I went to Tijuana (and) began by working as a volunteer nurse there for the UCSD project that was looking at the link between injection and HIV in Tijuana. So I got to know the people living in the canal because I would run the HIV tests on them much of the time. They'd come to the research office, and they'd meet me. Pretty soon I told them that I was also a photographer and that I was interested in doing this project.

"The canal is foul. The ground is covered in used syringes, human excrement, bits of food, rats, and cockroaches. So I bought myself a small folding stool... I'd simply go down there and unfold my stool beside a group of people who were sitting around shooting up. And sit there, for maybe 20 minutes, half an hour, exchange the odd comment, and that was about it. There wasn't a need to say a whole lot. It was as much simply being there, and spending time, that earned me some sort of credibility."

These images are visceral and the story equally difficult to read knowing that with proper medical care many of these people would have a good chance at survival. But as Cohen said that may be the case in wealthy countries; it is the most vulnerable who “slip through the cracks”. And the figures are startling. Less than half the world’s 37 million HIV positive people receive treatment and live in countries where medical care is not readily available. And that's the recorded cases. How many others are under the radar is unknown.

Cohen has been covering the AIDS epidemic since 1990. He said, "I used to visit AIDS wards that had hundreds of people dying from HIV untreated. I never see that anymore. But things improved so dramatically because people the world over made noise about what was going wrong. Tomorrow Is a Long Time is in that same tradition".

To read the full interview visit Mother Jones
Outside her makeshift shelter in a section of the Tijuana River Canal known as El Bordo, Reyna Ortiz holds a heroin syringe in her mouth. Reyna was in one of the highest risk groups for HIV: a female who injected drugs and had regular unprotected sex with a male addict who was also injecting. Malcolm Linton/Polaris


Dr. Patricia González presses on a patient's neck at a Friday first-aid clinic that she began in July 2014 in the Tijuana River Canal. Malcolm Linton/Polaris


Villareal smokes crystal meth one evening in his room at a boardinghouse in downtown Tijuana. Malcolm Linton/Polaris


Transgender sex worker Fernanda Sánchez waits for clients at night on a street in Tijuana's red-light district. Transgender women and gay men have the highest HIV infection rates of any group in Tijuana. Malcolm Linton/Polaris

Exhibitions:
New York - Stephen Kasher Gallery

PM New York Daily: 1940-48

Weegee

First published in June 1940, the richly illustrated PM New York Daily and the Sunday version PM Weekly were vehicles for socially progressive thought. Its mandate was clear - “PM is against people who push other people around. PM accepts no advertising. PM belongs to no political party. PM is absolutely free and uncensored. PM’s sole source of income is its readers — to whom it alone is responsible. PM is one newspaper that can and dares to tell the truth.” 

"PM considered photography a foremost instrument for communicating truth as opposed to objectivity, in the same vein as leftist illustrated periodicals from interwar Europe, such as Arbeiten Illustrierte Zeitung, Vu, and Ce Soir. PM declared that photographers are a vital and integral part of the very idea of PM — that they would write stories with photographs, as report­ers wrote them in words." 

Despite attracting renowned photographers including Margaret Bourke-White, Ralph Steiner and Weegee, and writers such as Ernest Hemingway, Dorothy Parker and Tip O’Neill, founder Ralph Ingersoll, the former managing editor of Time-Life Publications couldn’t make PM pay. With a mandate to accept no advertising, PM’s loyal readership wasn’t enough to cover costs and in 1948 PM closed its doors. 

But its legacy lives on and PM New York Daily: 1940-48 features more than 75 black and white photographs from PM staff and freelancers showing the breadth of coverage that appeared within the pages of this groundbreaking publication. 

Bernie Aumuller

Gene Badger

Helen Levitt

Irving Haberman

Margaret Bourke-White

Morris Engel

Weegee

Photographers on show: Weegee, Helen Levitt, Morris Engel, Margaret Bourke-White, Lisette Model, Mary Morris, Irving Haberman, and Arthur Leipzig.

PM New York Daily: 1940-48
Until 20 February
Steven Kasher Gallery
515 W. 26th St.
New York

FOAM - Amsterdam

Francesca Woodman - On Being An Angel 
Francesa Woodman Untitled MacDowell Colony Peterborough New Hampshire 1980 
(C) George and Betty Woodman

During her short life, American photographer Francesca Woodman (1958-1981) used self-portraiture to explore gender, representation, sexuality and corporality inserting herself as the subject in each image or on occasion using stand-ins. At the age of 22 she committed suicide leaving several hundred silver gelatine prints of which 102 photographs including several large-format diazotype prints and six short videos are on show at Foam. Since her death her work has been exhibited widely and she is said to have inspired artists around the world. 

Francesc Woodman Self-portrait talking to Vince Providence Rhode Island 1977 
(C) George and Betty Woodman

Francesca Woodman From Space2 providence Rhode Island 1976
(C) George and Betty Woodman

Francesca Woodman Self deceit 1 Rome Italy 1978 
(C) George and Betty Woodman

Francesca Woodman Untitled Rome Italy 1977-78
(C) George and Betty Woodman
 
Until 9 March
Foam Fotografiemuseum
Keizersgracht 609, Amsterdam
Sydney - ACP

Martin Parr - Life’s a Beach 






It is fitting that Magnum photographer Martin Parr’s exhibition 'Life’s a Beach' is housed at the Bondi Pavilion Gallery on the shore of one of Australia’s most iconic beaches. Taken over a number of years on beaches around the world from Italy, China, Japan, the US and the UK, 'Life’s a Beach' is Parr at his irreverent best. Loud, kaleidoscopic, banal, bizarre.

Until 27 March
Bondi Pavilion Gallery
Queen Elizabeth Drive
Bondi Beach

January 22, 2016

Friday Round Up - 22 January, 2016

Welcome to the first Friday Round Up for 2016. Now in its fourth year, Friday Round Up has featured hundreds of photographers from around the world and showcased work that encapsulates the diversity of photojournalism today.

It’s always worthwhile to look back on the year that was before plunging into a new one so this week features highlights from 2015. Plus Head On Photo Awards are now open and Riga Photomonth calls for submissions.

The Year That Was - Photojournalism Now's 2015 Highlights
In no order of preference, the following selection is made from the numerous photo essays featured on the blog last year. 


Katie Orlinsky Bought and Sold in Nepal


Mary F. Calvert The Battle Within: Sexual Assault in America's Military

Chris Jordan Intolerable Beauty

Darcy Padilla The Julie Project

Sean Gallagher The Toxic Price of Leather

James Hosking Beautiful by Night

Paul Kitagaki Jr Japanese American Internment Survivors

Greg Kahn Cuba

Richard Ross Girls in Justice

Robin Hammond Where Love is Illegal

Arnau Bach Suburbia

Evgenia Arbugaeva Weatherman

Louise Whelan African/Australian

Emilio Fraile The Fate of Electronic Waste

Timothy Fadek Requiem for a Dive Bar

Magnus Wennman Where the Children Sleep

Stephen Mallon Next Stop Atlantic

Tom Hussey Reflections

Call for Entries:

Head On Photo Awards 2016

This year there are four award categories with a total prize pool of $50,000. Categories: portrait, landscape, mobile and students. The Awards are open to professional and emerging photographers, photojournalists and artists. Deadline is 28 February. Visit the website for more details.

Riga Photomonth
The second edition of Riga Photomonth will be held this year in Latvia in May. Organisers are calling for entries under the themes of Territories, Borders and Checkpoints. Deadline 1 February. To find out more visit the site here.

December 18, 2015

Last Friday Round Up of the Year - 18 December, 2015

On this week's post, the last for 2015, three very special books are reviewed - Purple, Brown, Grey, White, Black: Life in Death by Daniel Schumann; The Middle of Somewhere by Sam Harris; and Moments of My Life by Konrad Winkler. Plus an interview with Gina Martin on collecting photography books.

Wishing all my readers a happy and safe festive season and a wonderful new year. Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up will be back on 22nd January, 2016. Next year I'll be inviting photographers to submit work for particular themes - hope, love, peace, the environment are some of the topics I'd like to explore. Let me know what you are interested in seeing.

All the best
Alison Stieven-Taylor

A Passion for Collecting Books - Gina Martin


National Geographic’s Gina Martin has been collecting photography books for close to a decade. During that time she’s amassed an impressive collection of around 720 books, many of which are signed and personalised. A number are no longer in print, and have become highly collectible – like her most expensive single purchase, Danish photographer Jacob Aue Sobol's Sabine. But Gina doesn’t collect to sell. These books are keepers.

Gina fell into photography when she joined National Geographic 16 years ago after working in politics for many years. When she moved into National Geographic Creative, the agency side of the business, her interest in photography began. But it wasn’t until she joined the team at LOOK3 Festival of the Photograph (held in Charlottsville, Virginia) that her interest really piqued.

“When I started to work for LOOK3 it really opened me up to work outside of Geographic. I was very Geographic driven at that point and when I joined LOOK3 I was able to expose myself to other types of photography,” she tells me from her office in Washington DC.

That was around 2007 and since then Gina has invested in all manner of photography books. She says her taste has changed along the way moving from the large stylised publications of the big publishing houses to works that are more unique and published by boutique houses or more often by the photographers themselves.

“I am not a big fan of your typical coffee table photography book. The work is beautiful, but the design is not that interesting. I am more likely to buy a Todd Hido book than a Salgado. I love anything Alec Soth produces whether it’s in newspaper form or a tiny little book, anything Alec Soth does I think is brilliant. I love Carolyn Drake’s Two Rivers, it is one of the coolest designs I’ve seen. Don Weber’s Interrogations is another one. I love the size and the design of it. Jason Eskenazi’s Wonderland is just beautiful, absolutely beautiful. Those are the kinds of books I collect.” 










Two Rivers Carolyn Drake (above and below)





Gina is a great believer in crowdsourcing and has supported numerous book projects, which she says is one approach to starting a collection. “With Kickstarter (and other crowdsourcing platforms) you are donating money and you are getting a book. If I can donate $50 to help a photographer with their project and get a book out of it, I think that’s a great way to start collecting. You have to support your community when you can. I really believe in supporting photographers and that’s how I get a lot of books”.

Other ways to boost your photography book collection is through attending festivals and book signing events. “If I am going to see a photographer at a book signing then I make sure I get that book. I buy a lot of books in Perpignan (at Visa pour l’image) as they always do book signings and also at LOOK3 - you know who the three main artists are going to be so bring your Nan Goldin or your Alec Soth books down there. You get to meet them and get them signed and I think that’s a cool thing. If they write something personal, whether it was great having a drink with you at LOOK3 or whatever, I love it”.

While Gina doesn’t look at her books every day, she often has the opportunity to go through her collection. “I do have photographers visiting all the time, I had four last week and that’s when it usually happens. I’ve had photographers come because they want to be inspired or they are looking to publish, so I pull books off the shelf to show what I like”.

Gina’s had bookshelves custom-made to house her collection, but she’s already being squeezed for space. “I’m just getting creative in where I am putting them,” she laughs. “I might have to clean a few out at some point, some that I’m not really attached to. I could probably get rid of 20…maybe”. 


Gina colour codes her collection

For insurance reasons Gina keeps a spreadsheet of all her books noting the name of the photographer, the title, the ISBN, how much it cost and whether it has been signed and personalised. “If my house goes up in flames I need to show that I had a collection. I take a photo of the front page of the book with the signature so I have a record because it’s worth a lot of money. Books don’t go on the shelf until they are on the spreadsheet. It’s a little work, but it’s a great reference...I looked for a book once for two hours, and I couldn’t find it. So I looked it up on the spreadsheet and it wasn’t there. I could have sworn I owned it. I wanted to, but I didn’t. I do now,” she smiles.

In closing I ask if she has a favourite book. “It is hard to choose…one of my favourites is Jason Eskenazi’s Wonderland. I love Chris Anderson’s Capitolio, and those I've mentioned before - Carolyn Drake’s Two Rivers and Don Weber’s Interrogations. I have a signed copy of Eggleston’s Guide and that was kind of a coup for me to get that signed. I love Stanley Greene’s Black Passport, it’s a beautiful story. I rarely read the books, but I read every word of that one. Same with Eugene Richards’ War is Personal. But I don’t have a favourite favourite”.

Purple Brown Grey White Black: Life in Death – Daniel Schumann 


This is a beautiful book and an equally beautiful story. German photographer Daniel Schumann spent a year photographing nine residents at a hospice, documenting their journey and drawing focus on how we as human beings deal with the inevitable; death.

In Germany young people have to do Civil Service instead of Military Service. Schumann chose to undertake something he knew little about and had never had exposure to; working in a hospice. “I wanted to work with people. I am really thankful that I had this opportunity to work at the hospice – without the civil service I would never have had an idea to work there. It has influenced my ideas about life and my photography”.

Following this compulsory year of civil service in 2002, Schumann studied photography returning to the hospice four years later to being his first long-term project. Schumann sought permission from all those he photographed ensuring he asked only those who were able to make a considered decision about participating in the project. As the project unfolded family members were also involved in various capacities – a son held a reflector to provide Schumann with a softer light in which to photograph his mother. A wife called to let him know her husband had passed away and to ask Schumann to photograph him. 


Wolfgang

Horst

“I followed each of them as long as possible – some I photographed only a few times and others over a whole year. With this project I am trying to show that every age of these people is very individual and that everybody deals with their situation very differently. Some are very peaceful and relaxed and have a feeling they have done everything in their life they wanted to do and are supported by family. Others are really struggling and are afraid of dying”.

I met Schumann in Sydney earlier this year where he was exhibiting this work for Head On Photo Festival. I asked him what it was like to photograph these people knowing that the end of his story with them would be their death?

“Civil service prepared me so I knew what would happen, but of course every time you get to know somebody it will be a loss when that person dies. It will be sad to lose this person. Photographing these people after death was a way for me to say goodbye and through this project I have found photography is a very good way for me to deal with and understand the world around me.” 


Horst 


Hildegard

Throughout the book Schumann uses photographs of the forest in its four seasons to break the story. He says his intention here is to give the reader the opportunity to pause and think about what they’ve just seen and to also remind us that in nature there is birth and death with the changing of the seasons. “That’s absolutely normal for us to see every year. I want to propose the idea of trying to see our own decline in a similar way, as a natural process, to not have the feeling about death being something completely abstract and terrible. It happens to everybody of course…although I have no idea how I will view death when I get old”.

There are many things to like about this book. In particular the fact that Schumann chose only a few people to follow and has photographed them frequently throughout their journey, delivers an intimacy as well as clarity on the evolution of each individual’s experience.

Schumann, who also designed the book, says he chose to feature portraits in chronological order “so you meet people again and again. It was important for me not to focus on the decline of the person, so not to show their portraits all in a row where you focus on how they look. It was more about focusing on the personality of these people by not being able to compare them directly. To show more too of the cycle of life and how people are coming and others are going and how each of these situations are very individual”.

In Purple Brown Grey White Black he follows one woman, Ulrike, over the year and her portraits are interspersed throughout the book. He tells that she was an artist and knew what photography could do in expressing how she felt. “She had ALS so she couldn’t talk very well, but she told me she was using my photographs to communicate to her children what she was feeling“. 


Ulrike



Schumann has treated each person with dignity and it is uplifting to see that he has captured their personalities rather than just their illnesses or their isolation – so many who go into a hospice are shut out from the world, their dignity stripped with the failing of their bodies and minds, their individuality forgotten in the pace of hospice routine and modern medicine.

“When you go into a hospice you are drawn out of society. Nobody is going there if they don’t have to. I think especially for this reason people said yes I want to be photographed because I was saying I am interested in you, I care about the situation you are in, you are still important.” That’s a fabulous, and important message.

Visit Daniel Schumann's website 

The Middle of Somewhere – Sam Harris 




The “moment between moments” – that is what photographer Sam Harris says he was looking for in his quest to photograph family life. In his second book The Middle of Somewhere, it is this undefinable element, that unspoken something that makes this work so engaging, taking it from a collection of personal moments to a universally understood story.

The Middle of Somewhere, which won book of the year at the Lucie Awards this year, follows on from Harris’ first book, Postcards from Home, which documented life with his two young daughters.

In this new book, published by Ceiba, Harris extends the story to allow an insight into the family’s journey that saw them leave London, travel through India where their second daughter was born, and finally arrive in rural Western Australia where the now live in harmony with their surrounds. 







This story doesn’t follow a chronological order, which is part of its appeal. Interspersed with the photographs of his daughters at various ages and engaged in everyday pursuits, are snippets of writing inserted on paper that is reminiscent of a diary - post it notes stuck on a page, an excerpt from his wife Yael’s journal. A pictorial travelogue also features, again reproduced to evoke the idea that we are looking at a personal notebook. These design elements become conduits to a deeper narrative drawing the reader into an immersive experience as Harris and his family’s life unravels before us. 





The Middle of Somewhere is brilliantly edited and beautifully designed. It’s concise without losing its richness, the texture and weight of the paper and the luminous colour of the photographs allow the story to lift from the pages and for the images to take on a life of their own. It is a wonderful next step in Harris’ evolution as a photographic artist.

Ceiba

Moments of My Life – Konrad Winkler 


Another book based on personal experience is Moments of My Life - Konrad Winkler from M.33. Melbourne photographer Konrad Winkler has been taking photographs since the 1960s. In this book each photograph is paired with text that serves to explain the image through personal anecdote. It is written in a voice that suggest the author is having a chat with you over a beer or a coffee and that gives the book an idiosyncratic edge that really appeals to me.





As with other M.33 publications Moments of My Life is a quality production and its clean design by Jason McQuoid allows both the images and texts to receive the attention they deserve.  
In 2013 Winkler spoke of this body of work saying, “This is a (book) about photos; about why we take them and what they mean to us. It is about the photographs that we use to confirm and validate our existence; that help us remember both the significant as well as the insignificant events of our lives. We often remember things, not because they are important, but because we have a photo that we like and that makes us happy. What these images will mean to us in the long run, time will decide and many will be discarded. The text explores this connection, and is as important as the image, even when it slightly misrepresents it”. Moments of My Life really resonated with me and is highly engaging.

M.33