August 04, 2017

Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up - 4th August, 2017

This week Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up goes back to Hong Kong with Benny Lam's Trapped, plus some personal insights from a recent trip.

Photo essay:
Benny Lam - Trapped


According to the Society for Community Organisation, in Hong Kong more than 200,000 people live in what are described as 'Coffin Cubicles,' tiny, cramped spaces that house individuals and also families with children. Pressured by unemployment, rising housing costs and overcrowding, many find themselves with little choice. Greedy landlords divide up rooms and buildings, illegally, and charge more than $USD250 a month for the privilege of living in a room the size of a broom closet. 







Photographer Benny Lam's expose is shocking. He told National Geographic's Proof that through his series called “Trapped,” he "wants to illuminate the suffocating dwellings that exist where the lights of Hong Kong’s prosperity don’t reach. He hopes by making the tenants and their homes visible, more people will start paying attention to the social injustices of their circumstances.

“You may wonder why we should care, as these people are not a part of our lives,” Lam writes on his Facebook page. “They are exactly the people who come into your life every single day: they are serving you as the waiters in the restaurants where you eat, they are the security guards in the shopping malls you wander around, or the cleaners and the delivery men on the streets you pass through. The only difference between us and them is [their homes]. This is a question of human dignity.”




(C) All photos Benny Lam

You can read his story and view more images at National Geographic Proof.

Observation:
Hong Kong Domestic Workers' Day Off


One Sunday when I was in Hong Kong recently I saw these congregations of women. They were sitting on the sidewalk, on overpasses, outside hotels and up-market shopping centres. At first I thought they were homeless, although the sheer numbers refuted that notion. Quickly I learned their stories.  

Hong Kong’s live-in domestic workers are entitled to only one day off a week. With no place of their own, every Sunday they congregate on the streets, a practice that has been going on since the 1980s. 

Thousands of mostly female Filipino migrant workers bring food, drink and music. They sit with their friends on pieces of cardboard spending the entire day outdoors, and often staying until late into the night. They eat, dance, play cards and chat about their lives and their families who they have left behind - often these women have to leave their own children and travel afar to earn money for the family. 

Most of these women are abused by their employers - underpaid, underfed and forced to live in accommodation that in some instances takes the form of a mat on the floor of a closet. The majority work 16 hour days. 

But some domestic workers are beginning to organise and in recent months there have been protests for improved working conditions. 

Yet another glimpse into a side of Hong Kong that is in stark contrast to the tourism brochures. 




(C) All photos Alison Stieven-Taylor 2017

July 28, 2017

Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up - 28th July, 2017

This week Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up is dedicated to my wonderful mother-in-law Nancy Taylor who passed away this week at the age of 83. She was a very important figure in my life, a woman whose amazing spirit carried her through life with joy and dignity despite the hardships she faced. I'm going to miss her.

Nancy loved to travel and equally loved photography. Her own archive is quite extensive and contains photographs of her many trips to places where few women of her generation travelled on their own including Zimbabwe and China. I know she would like the collection I share with you today from Sebastião Salgado's Genesis, Edward Burtynsky's China and finally, Nick Brandt's, On this earth, a shadow falls. RIP dear Nan.

Genesis
Sebastião Salgado





(C) Sebastião Salgado


China
Edward Burtynsky







(C) Edward Burtynsky
On this earth, a shadow falls
Nick Brandt







(C) Nick Brandt

July 21, 2017

Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up - 21st July, 2017

This week on Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up - Valentyn Odnoviun's Surveillance, the annual Swan Upping on the Thames, Monique Jaques Gaza Girls to become a book, and the winners of the Magnum Photography Awards are announced.

Photo Essay: 
Valentyn Odnoviun - Surveillance



Ukrainian photographer Valentyn Odnoviun, who is based in Vilnius, Lithuania, has spent the past few years creating images of the spy holes in the prison cell doors and the solitary walking yards of former prisoners of the KGB. 

It’s an intriguing series that leaves much to the imagination of the viewer, which is Odnoviun’s objective: “to create a more concrete communication with the help of interpretation and conceptual thinking”. 

 Thanks to Doug Spowart for introducing me to this work, which he discovered at this year's Vienna PhotoBook Festival. 



(C) All images Valentyn Odnoviun


Event: 
What's Swan Upping you might ask?

(C) Leon Neal

This week the annual count of the Queen's swans began on the Thames. Known as Swan Upping this is perhaps one of the more quaint and quirky of the British royals' rituals, but it makes for a fabulous photo opportunity. 

(C) Peter Macdiarmid

(C) Dan Kitwood

(C) Dan Kitwood

(C) Dan Kitwood

Book:
Monique Jaques - Gaza Girls: Growing Up in the Gaza Strip 



Over the past five years photojournalist Monique Jaques has travelled to the Gaza Strip to document what she describes as the “strength, creativity and vibrancy of Palestinian girls and young women”.

Now she has partnered with FotoEvidence to publish a book of her photographs. “Gaza Girls: Growing Up in the Gaza Strip” is a collection of photographic essays and written accounts of women coming of age in a place we more readily associate with war and conflict. It is intended to highlight the challenges of daily life, as well as moments of joy found in a complicated existence. 





(C) All photos Monique Jaques

To find out more check out the project at Kickstarter

Awards:
Magnum Photography Awards 2017 


This week the annual Magnum Photography Award winners were announced. Congratulations to all who won and a special shout out to Nick Hannes who has been featured on Photojournalism Now in the past with his Mediterranean and the Continuity of Man series. This week Nick took out the Documentary Series award for his brilliant Bread and Circuses, a photo essay on Dubai's elite. You can see all the winners on the Lensculture site.



All photos (C) Nick Hannes

July 14, 2017

Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up - 14th July, 2017

This week on Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up - the 7th edition of Cortona on the Move International Photography Festival kicks off plus Michael Wolf's retrospective Life in Cities and a new exhibition for Black Eye Gallery Sydney. Also entries are now open for the Australian Photographic Book of the Year Awards and the Moran Portrait Prize.

Festival:
Cortona on the Move – Cortona, Italy


(C) Pete Souza

The 7th edition of this international festival of photography held in Tuscany, Italy presents an impressive and eclectic line-up of work from around the globe. 

My picks are former Obama photographer Pete Souza’s Obama: An Intimate Portrait, which is a real treat, providing a rare personal insight into the former President during his eight years in the White House.

(C) Pete Souza

(C) Pete Souza

(C) Pete Souza

(C) Pete Souza

(C) Pete Souza

Also, renowned American photojournalist and activist Donna Ferrato showcases Woman: 40 Years, which explores themes of sex, love, and violence. 

(C) Donna Ferrato

(C) Donna Ferrato

(C) Donna Ferrato

Last year’s Eugene Smith Grant recipient Justyna Mielnikiewicz exhibits photographs from her award-winning submission The Meaning of a Nation - Russia and its Neighbours: Georgia and Ukraine

(C) Justyna Mielnikiewicz

(C) Justyna Mielnikiewicz

(C) Justyna Mielnikiewicz

Australian Adam Ferguson presents The Afghans, and Matt Black’s epic Geography of Poverty is also on show. 

(C) Adam Ferguson

(C) Adam Ferguson

(C) Adam Ferguson

(C) Matt Black

(C) Matt Black

(C) Matt Black

French photographer Sandra Mehl presents her photo essay on the daily life of Ilona and Maddalena, two sisters living in the working class neighbourhood of Montpellier.

(C) Sandra Mehl 

(C) Sandra Mehl 

(C) Sandra Mehl 

(C) Sandra Mehl 

Michael Ewart’s I giardini selvatici della memoria - Tracce di una vetrina documents the changing face of Cortona. This collection, which he’s been working on since 1979, captures the transformation of what was a traditional agricultural market town to the luxury tourist destination it is today. 

(C) Michael Ewart

(C) Michael Ewart


(C) Michael Ewart

(C) Michael Ewart

In Danakil: Land of Salt and Fire Andrea Frazzetta discovers the Afar nomads of Ethiopia, who live in one of the most inhospitable locations on the planet. 

(C) Andrea Frazzetta

(C) Andrea Frazzetta

(C) Andrea Frazzetta

Exhibition sites are located around the historic centre of Cortona and in the old DeMedici hilltop fortress - Fortezza del Girifalco. 

Until 1 October
For more information visit the website.  

Exhibitions: Arles

Michael Wolf - Life in Cities

Architecture of Density (C) Michael Wolf

Architecture of Density (C) Michael Wolf

Architecture of Density (C) Michael Wolf

This is an exhibition I wish I could see. If you are in Arles, enjoy it for me! Michael Wolf's work on living in cities is sublime. Here is a very short selection from this amazing retrospective beginning with images from Hong Kong (above) from where I've just returned and featuring work from his Paris Rooftops series and Tokyo Compression. 

Paris Rooftops (C) Michael Wolf

Paris Rooftops (C) Michael Wolf

Paris Rooftops (C) Michael Wolf

Paris Rooftops (C) Michael Wolf

Tokyo Compression (C) Michael Wolf

Tokyo Compression (C) Michael Wolf

Tokyo Compression (C) Michael Wolf

Michael Wolf - Life in Cities
ÉGLISE DES FRÈRES PRÊCHEURS
Until 27 AUGUST

Sydney

Rob Love & SoonHoe - Luminosity & Momentum

(C) SoonHoe

(C) SoonHoe

(C) SoonHoe

Melbourne-based photographic artists Rob Love and SoonHoe team up to present Luminosity & Momentum at Sydney’s Black Eye Gallery. 

Love’s colour work draws on the relationship between water and light, his canvas Brighton beach in Melbourne. In contrast, SoonHoe’s black and white work was created on the shores of Malaysia’s fishing islands. Both artists focus on creating their images in-camera, with little post-production. It’s an interesting show worth checking out to see what the work looks like on the walls. 

(C) Rob Love

(C) Rob Love

(C) Rob Love

18 July to 6 August
Opening night 20 July 6-8pm
Black Eye Gallery
3/138 Darlinghurst Road
Darlinghurst (Sydney)