Yearly Archives: 2009

James Nachtwey on the Impact of Images

Article from PDN pulse:

Veteran photojournalist James Nachtwey shared the stories behind images he’s shot throughout his career at the keynote address Saturday afternoon at PDN PhotoPlus Expo. It was a presentation of one photographer’s life’s work, but it was also a 30-year global history of armed conflict and critical social issues. Speaking before a standing-room-only crowd, Nachtwey explored the power the mass media can have in stirring people to action when it chooses to cover a humanitarian crisis.

Nachtwey said he believes photojournalists are civil servants; the service they provide is awareness. Their work is part of the free flow of information that “is absolutely vital to a free and open society.”

Nachtwey first worked as a conflict photographer in Northern Ireland. Showing images of Irish citizens carrying out their lives amid burning cars, he noted that the “front lines in contemporary war are not isolated battlefields, they are where people live.” He also showed images from conflicts in Central America, Lebanon, Eastern Uganda, Sri Lanka and Iraq.

After the fall of the Berlin Wall, Nachtwey said, he turned to documenting critical social issues. He had heard stories of an AIDS crisis in Romania’s orphanages and went there to report it, trading cigarettes, chocolate and brandy for access. In 1966, Romanian president Nicolai Ceausescu had banned birth control and abortion, and insisted that women under 40 bear five children apiece. Many families could not support five children, and the orphan population swelled. At the severely under-funded orphanages, sick children received injections of adult blood rather than medication, and AIDS quickly spread as needles were reused repeatedly.

Witnessing what he called a “gulag of Romanian children” deeply shook his faith, Nachtwey said. “Knowing that the world would respond” urged him on, and fortunately the world did, he said.

In 1992 he went to Somalia to document famine, which he called “the oldest and most primitive weapon of mass destruction.”

On the night before his second trip to Somalia, he had a nightmare that nearly caused him to cancel his flight—what he had seen during his first trip had been so horrific.

Somalia taught him the importance of having images “published in the mass media at the time conflict is happening.” When The New York Times Magazine ran the Somalia images as a cover story, the phone at the Times rang off the wall with people who wanted to help, Nachtwey said. Last year, Nachtwey learned from an International Committee of the Red Cross official, Jean-Daniel Tauxe, that the magazine story helped the ICRC mobilize the largest aid effort they had undertaken since World War II in Somalia, saving 1.5 million people.

There has never been a scientific study of the impact of photojournalism, Nachtwey noted. “We all do what we do as an article of faith.” Learning of the effect of his Somalia photos made him feel his career had been worthwhile.

Nachtwey shared some lessons he has learned over the years. As he showed images of famine in Sudan, Nachtwey said he has discovered that people who live in poverty are not without hope, that people who are suffering are not without dignity, and that people who are afraid do not lack courage. While showing an image of a Chechen boy who had lost both his legs during the war between Russia and Chechnya during the 1990s, Nachtwey noted that he had learned to channel his rage and “turn it into something that would clarify his vision instead of clouding it.”

He also noted that “people open up to photographers who share risks with them.”

After the attacks of September 11, 2001, he saw his coverage of the Islamic world throughout his career as a single story. He called the incident a failure of politics but also a failure of journalism. The Islamic world had been crying out, he said. “Why weren’t we listening?”

His recent work covering AIDS in Africa and his TED Prize-supported project documenting Extensively Drug Resistant Tuberculosis (XDR-TB) globally were the final images in his presentation.

In closing his talk, he again noted that photography, along with political will and science, is at the service of humanity. Photojournalists, he said, aim their pictures at people’s best instincts.

— By Conor Risch

WPJA results – Two winning entries

The Wedding Photojournalist Association Q2 2009 contests results are out,
I cam away with two winning entries, unexpected and pleasantly surprised by the 2nd placing in Creative Portraits, and the wonderful review from the judges.

Thank you Don (the groom)! We found those waterguns in the boot of his car, long story cut short, we were actually looking for an umbrella.

CREATIVE PORTRAITS category, 2nd place:

20090812don

JUDGES COMMENTS: Very nice! This was something unexpected and I really love that the photographer thought outside of the box to get this frame. It’s something unlike anything else I’ve seen in this competition, it’s unusual and it’s whimsical, which is really nice. It’s a refreshing break from the norm. It’s an image that stands out, and kudos to the photographer.

JUDGES COMMENTS: The photographer captured great expressions, body language and environment that work well with the water gun in the bride’s hand and flowers in the groom’s hand. I wonder who will be the boss in this family?

RING DETAILS category, 12th place:

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JUDGES COMMENTS: “The rings in the trees” photo can be a tough one to pull off, but this is darn near perfect. The composition, use of color and effective use of f-stop make the rings jump out at you even though they are quite small.

Ruff - CONGRATS! The photos are stunning!!!!

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Balloons and Swarovski

Poverty is many things.
Emotional proverty is an inability to give.
Spiritual bankruptcy is an inability to love.
Educational destitution,
Leads to polluted institutions,
A soulless death,
An empty life.
Ans a waste of all we can be.
If knowing this, I still choose not to see,
Then poverty grows, nourished by me.

~ Caryn Franklin

rings and more

New times

After a few mind-clearing jogs, it’s become clearer that any creative business needs to indulge in truly, the reasons why people like us choose to venture out on our own – the freedom to go creatively crazy, to create continuously, to try new styles and not be afraid it’ll backfire, to do things that clients say they don’t want, unless they have seen it!

This is about soul, about exploration.
This is more than staying in business, getting the biggest gigs.
It’s more than servicing your clients. It’s simply servicing yourself.

Hence watch out for the main wedding site, a new section will be added really soon.

Sonia - enjoy reading your blog…

write moooooore plwease…. =P

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Aughost

The Hungry Ghost month generally means business is on the slow. My clients tell me it’s not just the wedding photography, but with bank servicing and investment. because nobody really wants to part with huge sums at this time of the year. Same with the property market.
I was a little surprised, as a reporter I didn’t know these things.
This time of the year is usually the busiest , most bustling period for newspapers – our appraisal’s coming up and of course, you gotta fight for your page one. Plus, there’s generally a lot of news (more bad than good) to report on from mid August through to September.
This is my first “Hungry Ghost” since coming on full-time as a photographer, so I’m finding out and adjusting to some new things.
Nevertheless, it’s an important time to review work.
I’ve looked through and dug up a lot of old pictures, some of them I cringe to look at today. I’ve also become a lot more critical when it comes to composing pictures, how they should be cropped – at the stage of taking the photo, not in photoshop.
Strange though, most of the old pictures taken in film, way back in 2003, capture a lot more the essence of time, than a frame haphazardly shot with a digital camera.

I’m also trying out new ways to light up subjects, and experimented at Shoegaze, organised by my former Theatre classmates. See what you think.

It’s made me realise that as a photographer who’s set out to do pure journalistic documentary, my preference has really shifted to one that’s more stylistic and controlled.
Even in weddings the claim of being ‘photojournalistic’ doesn’t stand alone without strings attach – capture beautiful moments, make people in the pictures look good. In real photojournalism, come on admit it, which photographer doesn’t want to make his photo more dramatic if he could? It could be the distance of his wide-angled lens to the subject, or the way the lens confronts the subject. In that sense, pure photojournalism could simply equate to an unthinking eye with a point-and-shoot.

20090828 shoegaze 94

There’s MTV VJ Utt footing his bill. Sorry, no concessions for tv personalities
20090828 shoegaze 100

Photographer, Ming, hides his face

Great leap forward @ Army Half Marathon

While shooting quite a monotonous scene of joggers at the Army Half Marathon, this guy decides to take a leap, flying high in front of my camera. Caught me by surprise, because as he did he, he also went “Hoi!” Don’t understand the rationale behind it, but it turned out to be my favourite shot.

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And then there was this guy who borrowed the occasion for a surprise proposal. He ran with a card near the finish line, with the words “Xinyi, will you marry me?” The MC got his very bashful girlfriend to raise her hand. He got on bended knee, steady as a bee, she curled in part embarrassment, part elation, quickly slipping on the ring so that he could get up and ran past the finish line. How sweet and original! Most memorable, and costs nothing, kudos to the couple!

20090816AHM- 586

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And then, there were also all other runners which were very inspiring, got me all psyched up for training!

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A Black Forest Fairytale Wedding: Marc + Bianca

Wedding Waltz

Marc with nephew

Waiter at dinner

Garden

Moving like Michael Jackson

Carsten Hartmann - Oh sorry, me again…

I have thought about my last comment and asked me if I represented what I would say.

I think I like Your photography because they aren´t just pictures of the moment.
It is so easy to take a pictures. Everybody can buy a camera and shoot everything infront of the lens.
But what about the magic of a moment? How can You get this on a photo? How can You take picture of soul, of feelings, of memories of thoughts? How can You take pictures of what a place wants to say to You? Or a landscape, or a person…
And don´t they tell different things to different persons/viewers?

I think You can create those photographys.
And that is what I wanted to say in my last comment…

Carsten

P.S.: Still sorry for my bad English!

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Carsten Hartmann - Hey Mindy,

just wanted You to know that I really like the pictures of Biancas and Marcs wedding You had place in Your blog.
First of all the picture of the wedding waltz! It is such a great photo You have shoot! How did You get this perfect moment? Look at Marcs face, he looks so happya and proud! And Bianca looks sooo gorgeous. I love thic picture. :-)

And also the picture of Marc and his nephew Ben. This photo looks so sweet. But no kitsch. More honestly. (when I see this picture I could imagine what a good father Marc will be in future)

And the picture of this boy is a well choosen one! I don´t mean the photography. It is ok. ^^ I mean the memory with which the piczure is connecting. Everyone who saw this boy dancing on Michael Jacksons music, will become a smile like me when seeing this picture!

Ok…thats it.

I think You are a master of Your work.

love,
Carsten

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Charms of Changi Pre-Wedding: Don + Eileen

By the time we arrived at our first location, storm was brewing. Atypical by last weeks’ standard. The wind almost, at once, ruined Eileen’s hair, I had mind to call off the shoot but we knew we didn’t have another date where both parties could make it. I decided to give it a go, let’s see how different the pictures can get. Alas, some rain, then drizzle, then clear skies.
See if you can spot droplets.

don8aweb

don7

don3-106aweb

don6

don1

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Las Vegas Photography - I like the last one, they are perfect couple… Very nice and stunning wedding photography here

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Jenna - Pretty nice post. I just stumbled upon your blog and wanted to say
that I’ve really enjoyed reading your blog posts. In any case
I’ll be subscribing to your feed and I hope you write again soon!

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Denvy - Love picture #4. That is art :)

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