Showing posts with label hong kong. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hong kong. Show all posts

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 07, 2017

Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up - 7th July, 2017

This week Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up comes to you from Hong Kong where I'm a lecturer on a master tour for global journalism studies.

It is a fascinating time to be here given the city has just celebrated, or commiserated depending on your perspective, the 20th anniversary (1 July) of the handover from Britain to China. Meeting with the major media organisations has also delivered different perspectives on the future of journalism and the significance of this city as a hub of global media.

But this Hong Kong visit has not only been about media and politics, it has also been about seeing exhibitions. Today I share my favourite with you, the retrospective of Fan Ho's work.

Profile: 
Fan Ho (1931-2016) - The Cartier-Bresson of the East


Fan Ho



Born in Shanghai in 1931, Fan Ho began his love of photography at the age of 14 after he was given a Kodak Brownie. Four years later he bought a Rolleiflex, which became his camera of choice. When he moved with his family in 1949 to Hong Kong he began documenting the city, spending long days waiting for the right light, the right scene, his imagination sparked by the daily happenings on the street.

Fan Ho experimented with lighting using the elements he found on the streets - smoke, shadow, steam, water - as special effects. He favoured shooting at dusk and his subjects were the ordinary people on the streets and in the markets.





















As is often the case, Fan Ho never set out to create an historical visual document of Hong Kong, but that is exactly what his collection, shot in the 1950s and 1960s, has become. Later Fan Ho went on to work in motion pictures and is also revered as a film director, but his love for still photography remained throughout his life. He also shared his knowledge teaching at various universities around the world.

Considered the father of street photography in Hong Kong, in 1959 Fan Ho published his book of essays, "Thoughts on Street Photography" which is still in print today, but only available in Chinese.

Fan Ho saw photography's "special link to reality" as its greatest asset, yet he also acknowledged the complexities involved in capturing that decisive moment.

He spoke on ideas of objectivity and subjectivity, debates that still occupy photographers' thoughts today. Fan Ho believed objectivity "seeks to portray reality in a direct, straightforward manner," while subjectivity "aimed at portraying another type of truth and had to be seen more as a reflection of one's soul and spirit in nature".
















(C) All works Fan Ho


To find out more about Fan Ho's work and to buy his books visit the website here.

Next week I'll be back blogging in the freeze of Melbourne's winter, but for now I'm enjoying the 80+% humidity, the massive daily thunderstorms and pelting rain and the heat of the East. Have a great weekend.