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Photographer

Conflict in Central African Republic


CENTRAFRIQUE
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''More than 150,000 Central Africans had been internally displaced, conflict in the north had affected about a million people''. Toby Lanzer, United Nations Resident/Humanitarian Coordinator in Central African Republic. Press Conference, 16 January 2007.

Since October 2006, Central African Armed Forces (FACA) have burned more than 2000 houses in the only region of Kaga Bandoro. Atrocities, rapes, summary executions, burnings of villages, destruction of harvests, many witnesses accuse the Central African Armed Forces (FACA). The people run away from their villages and hide in the bush where the FACA doesn't dare entering by fear of the rebellion that appeared as an answer to Francois Bozize's access to power after the overthrow of President Patasse in 2003.
The villagers are caught between the rebels they are accused of supporting, and the Central African military. They survive near their fields wher they lack of food, care, and clothes. Only two NGOs are there, Caritas, and MSF.

According to an a 40 year old agreement, the Fench army is in Central African Republic and gives a logistical and technical support (equipment and soldiers transportation) to the Central African Armed Forces (FACA).

Frédéric Sautereau, photoreporter, realised in December 2006 in the heart of the current conflict in Central African Republic.

We collaborated together to make a film including the photographs nd testimonies he brought from this "unexisting" conflict.

Produced by Oeil Public and À 360 Productions

Cornelis van Voorthuizen - Photoinstallation

Gallerietg18
Detail from: Ukraine

The Memory Carpet
The current installation at Gallery G18 (27.2-4.3) is a big mosaic compiled of the photographers life and work during the last decade from past to present. Moments of impact, flashbacks, encounters with friends - a carpet of memories, such as we all experience our own memories. We all like to collect pictures of important moments on the fridge or bulletinboard, moments that are precious or even life altering. The installation could be seen as a large scale fridge-installation of photos, a dialogue of images and encounters of importance. The print quality ranges from duraflex , cibachrome, different fiber papers , resin coated papers etc... the photos represent a collection of everything from snapshots to medium format.

About the artist
Since his childhood i Rwanda, Kenya and the US, the dutch photographer Cornelis van Voorthuizen has lived and travelled across all continents, photographing and making connections between friends and strangers. His work has been exhibited world-wide and published in prestigious magazines and books over the past 20 years. The passion for seeing the world through the lens has held Cornelis almost inseperable to the camera, a duo that hardly ever is seen separate from eachother.
www.photocornelis.com


Galleriet G18
Adress: Georgsgatan 18, 3:rd floor.
00120 Helsingfors
Finland
www.gallerietg18.fi

Struggle for indigenous autonomy

Los_olvidados

Los olvidados de Oaxaca
The struggle for indigenous autonomy in Mexico.

Thanks to the LIMEDDH (Liga Mexicana por la Defensa de los Derechos Humanos) and the OPIZ (Organización de los Pueblos Indígenas Zapotecos), Alexa Brunet, photographer, and Yves Bonnardel, writer, undertook an extended investigation into state repression in Mexico in January - February 2006.
“Los olvidados” (the forgotten ones) brings together a series of 'on site' portraits and testimonials of Mexican villagers. The project focuses on two indigenous communities in the state of Oaxaca : Loxicha and San Juan Lalana.
The members of these communities assert their right to be liberated from a corrupt power, to live from their land, and to live autonomously and according to their own customs.

The government of the state of Oaxaca is seeking to impose their power on local representatives, in order to profit from the resources of these regions, rich in land, cattle and minerals. The people that we have presented in this investigation have all been victims of violent reprisals. People close to them have been arrested, they have been threatened, sometimes abducted, tortured, and detained without charge for having defended their rights for better living conditions.

The aim of this collaboration is to make the situation of these two communities known to the general public and to contribute as far as possible to a just resolution of the conflict.

Texts : Yves Bonnardel
Translated from French by Ivora

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Airport

Airport_1

Exhibtion of O-de (Aude Moynot) du 1/03 - 31/03, 2007
Espace Guillaume expo
32,rue de Picardie
75003 Paris France

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The waste of the world

Bouvier

We think that we’re going to read "The Way of the World", but it soon becomes evident that it’s "The Way of the World" that has got hold of us. This is how it starts: to begin with you can’t read anything else, that you can accept, but soon you can’t read anything at all. Bouvier has a way of squeezing out each moment of happiness till the very last drop and preserving the product of this distillation in the phials of his memory in order to draw on it for his survival each time that happiness can’t be found… And for you, where does that leave you? You understand intensely what an enormous turmoil it must have meant for Nicolas Bouvier to fix this journey forever in the scarcity of his words: words perfectly made one for the other, that it becomes intolerable to not be him, at the time and the place when he wrote.

We have to exorcize this book, to reopen it, to accept that it can be a companion on the road of life again- that’s to say how it is possible to recount today, to paraphrase Nicolas, what it means to "undo" "the Way of The World".

Others, dealing with the same problem, had the chance to sort out this question face to face with him. This is not the case for us. Nicolas Bouvier died in 1998. At that time we hadn’t yet been completely obsessed by "the Way". Years later , when it became pressing to offload the weight, seeing that Nicolas was long longer there, the only way to do it was to make the trip. Of course our experience might have taken shape in another way, by staying where we were for instance, but it would have taken someone else and someone much stronger to have done it that way.

More picture from Frédric Lecloux / Vu'

Tiina Itkonen

Itkonen_1

Inughuit, is a serene tribute to the Inuit people of Greenland. Itkonen spent four months living with Polar Eskimos in 1995, 1998 and 2002. The images are from her book 'Inughuit' a portrait of the lives and landscapes of modern Polar Eskimos. Born in Helsinki, Itkonen was Finnish Young Photographer of the year 2003 and her work is already held in collections at the Helsinki City Art Museum, The Finnish Museum of Photography and the Modern Museum in Stockholm.
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Central African Republic

Rca_1

Frederic Sautereau, member of the Oeil Public photo agency, is just back from a travel to Central African Republic.

''More than 150,000 Central Africans had been internally displaced, conflict in the north had affected about a million people''. Toby Lanzer, United Nations Resident/Humanitarian Coordinator in Central African Republic. Press Conference, 16 January 2007.

Since October 2006, Central African Armed Forces (FACA) have burned more than 2000 houses in the only region of Kaga Bandoro. Atrocities, rapes, summary executions, burnings of villages, destruction of harvests, many witnesses accuse the Central African Armed Forces (FACA). The people run away from their villages and hide in the bush where the FACA doesn't dare entering by fear of the rebellion that appeared as an answer to Francois Bozize's access to power after the overthrow of President Patasse in 2003.
The villagers are caught between the rebels they are accused of supporting, and the Central African military. They survive near their fields wher they lack of food, care, and clothes. Only two NGOs are there, Caritas, and MSF.

According to an a 40 year old agreement, the Fench army is in Central African Republic and gives a logistical and technical support (equipment and soldiers transportation) to the Central African Armed Forces (FACA).

To discover other work from Frédéric Sautereau

Jacob Holdt

Jacobholdt_1

Jacob Holdt is a special photographer. You can find on his website a part of his works and ...his cv.
Extract:
"Having hitchhiked more than 5 times around the globe I thought I had the world record until I saw in Guinness that an American hitched even longer in the 60's.
Well, that was back in the days when you didn't have to wait very long for a ride...."

Alec Soth

Alexsoth

In the follow-up to his critically-praised monograph "Sleeping by the Mississippi", Alec Soth turns his eye to another iconic body of water, Niagara Falls. But as with his photographs of the Mississippi, Soth's pictures of Niagara are less about natural wonder than human desire. "I went to Niagara for the same reason as the honeymooners and suicide jumpers," says Soth, "the relentless thunder of the Falls just calls for big passion."

While the subject may be intense, these are quiet pictures. Using a large-format 8x10 camera, the photographs are rigorously composed and richly detailed. Working over the course of two years on both the American and Canadian sides of the Falls, Soth captures newlyweds and naked lovers, motel parking lots and pawn shop wedding rings. Throughout the book, Soth also includes a number of love letters from the subjects he photographed. Readers are privy to intimate confessions of teenage crushes, workplace affairs, heartbreak and suicide.

Oscar Wilde wrote of the Falls, "The sight of the stupendous waterfall must be one of the earliest, if not the keenest, disappointments in American married life." In Soth's "Niagara", we see both the passion and the disappointment. His pictures are a remarkable portrayal of modern love and its aftermath.
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Kimiko Yoshida

Kimikoyshida

Japanese artist Kimiko Yoshida creates installations of photographic self-portraits inspired by different cultures and traditional jewels.

Here, "The Black Akha Bride, Thailand. Self-portrait". Courtesy Pace/Primitive, New York, 2004.
C-print mounted on aluminium and Diasec, edition 10, 120 x 120 cm

Tadzio

Tadzio4
Tadzio explores cities from speed trains' windows.
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Namibia

Olivier_culmann

Discover the beautiful work of Olivier Culmann / Tendance Floue in Kolmanskop, Grillenthal, Bogenfels, Pomona, Elizabeth Bay...lost towns in the Namib desert.

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Brett Weston

Brettweston
© The Brett Weston

Brett Weston seemed destined from birth to become one of our greatest American photographic artists. Born in Los Angeles in 1911, the second son of photographer Edward Weston, he had perhaps the closest artistic relationship with his famous father of all four of the Weston sons. In 1925, Edward removed Brett from school and took him to Mexico where the fourteen year old became his father's apprentice. Surrounded by revolutionary artists of the day, such as Tina Modotti, Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, and influenced as well by the striking contrast of life in Mexico, it was there that Brett first began making photographs with a small Graflex 3 1/4 x 4 1/4 camera.

The introduction to modern art the younger Weston received via the work of painters Rivera and Jose Clemente Orozco, unquestionably influenced his sense of form and composition. A quality of design was evident in Brett's early images of the organic and man-made. He appreciated how the camera transformed subjects close up and how the contrast of black and white further altered the recognition of an object. It is therefore not difficult to understand his tendency to abstraction, a characterisitc by which he would be identified throughout his almost seventy year career.

Returning to California in 1926, Brett continued to assist his father in his Glendale portrait studio while exhibiting and selling his own photographs. At the age of eighteen, a group of his images were included in the German exhibition Film und Foto, considered one of the most important avant-garde exhibitions held between the two World Wars. This recognition brought the younger Weston international attention and inclusion in numerous photographic exhibitions in the following years. Although his art will forever be associated with his father's, it is unfair to continue to suggest that Brett's style was overly imitative of Edward's beyond these early years given what we have discovered in an enormous body of work produced over seven decades.

In 1929, Brett and his father moved to Carmel, California where the Weston family, including Brett's three brothers, would maintain homes for the rest of their lives. At various times, Brett Weston also lived in Los Angeles where he had his own studio and portrait business, and in New York where he was stationed in the army. He later traveled extensively on personal photographic trips to South America, Europe, Japan, Alaska, and Hawaii. Following a 1947 Guggenheim Fellowship which he used to photograph along the East Coast, he moved to Carmel to assist his ailing father, and pursue his fine art work, including wood sculpture that was influenced by his own photographs.

Throughout the decades of the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s, Brett Weston's style changed sharply and was characterized by high contrast, abstract imagery. The subjects he chose were, for the most part, not unlike what interested him early in his career; plant leaves, knotted roots and tangled kelp along the beach. He concentrated mostly on close-ups and abstracted details, but his prints reflected a preference for high contrast that reduced his subjects to pure form. In the late 1970s and into the 1980s Weston spent much of his time in Hawaii where he said, "I have found in this environment, everything I could want to interpret about the world photographically." He died at one of his two Hawaiian homes, in Kona, in January, 1993.
© The Brett Weston Archive

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Odessa, Odessa

Odessa_bush_home

Julien Daniel presents Odessa, Odessa, a serie shot between Odessa, Texas, and Odessa, Ukraine.

Julien Daniel was born in 1970. After graduating from the EFET audiovisual school of Paris in 1991, he began his career as a photographer in 1993. Julien has been a member of the Oeil Public photographers' association since 1997. His freelance work has regularly been published throughout the French Press, in publications such as: Liberation, Le Monde, L'Express, and Telerama, among others. Julien's own work has already received many distinctions: the World Press Photo Prize (in 2001 and 2002), the ''Attention Talent'' Fnac Prize (2002), the Fuji Prize (2002). He is the winner of the 2004 Kodak Critic's Prize.
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SILENCE AIDS

Bollendorff

Samuel Bollendorff, born in 1974, is a member of the Oeil Public agency. An independent photographer, his work is published regularly in the press. He looks at hospitals, schools, the police, and prisons, through a social lens, questioning the position of the individual within public institutions. Nominated for the young reporter Visa d'Or in 2001 for HOSPITAL SILENCE, his work then evolved into a series of portraits presenting the social implications of AIDS. SILENCE AIDS develops Bollendorff's investigation into photography as a tool for political reflection: it won Hachette Foundation's special prize, and was duly noted by the Kodak Critics prize. In 2004, he organised his SILENCE exhibition, presenting all his work on health issues. At the core of this event, forums brought together the public, workers in the health space, and politicians, who all debated the issues raised by his images.
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World musicians

Oulan_bator

Isabelle and Xavier Vayron travelled around the world to meet musicians from all countries.
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The edges of Europe

Edgesofeurope

Fifteen years have past between the fall of Berlin’s wall until european Union’s enlargement to the East.
On May 1st, 2004, three Baltic countries (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania), five Central Europe countries (Hungary, Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia and Slovenia) and two Mediterranean (Cyprus and Malta) have joined the Union. Bulgaria and Romania will follow in 2007.

European Union has now a new Eastern border. Turkey, Moldavia, Ukraine, Byelorussia and Russia are its new neighbours. Border ? Gap ? However, a new line divides again the continent.

Work done between June 2000 and August 2003.
Guy Pierre Chomette and Frederic Sautereau.
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Lynn Davis

Lynndavis
© Lynn Davis
"Emin Minaret of Suleiman Mosque, Turpan, China," 2001
Sepia and selenium toned gelatin silver print
40 x 40 inches
[China #4]

Lynn Davis (American, born 1944) received her Bachelor of Fine Arts from the San Francisco Art Institute in 1970. She then trained with Berenice Abbott in New York. Davis had her first exhibition in 1979 at the International Center of Photography (New York) alongside her close friend Robert Mapplethorpe. Her work underwent a dramatic shift after her first trip to Greenland in 1986 when she gave up the representation of the human form for the landscape. Setting herself in the grand tradition of nineteenth century landscape photography, and driven by a quasi encyclopedic desire to record the natural and architectural monuments of the world, Davis has since documented the pyramids of Egypt, the ancient architectural ruins of Burma, Cambodia, Thailand, India, Italy, and of the Middle East (Israel, Syria, Jordan, Turkey and Yemen), as well as mythical natural wonders, including the Grand Geyser in Yellowstone and Wave Rock in Australia. Davis's exploration of the African continent (including Mali, Ethiopia, Sudan, Kenya, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Ghana, Tanzania, and a second look at Egypt) resulted in the solo show Africa held at the Center for Creative Photography in Tucson in 1999. Selections of the African images appeared the same year in Wonders of the African World by Henry Louis Gates, Jr. 1999 also saw the publication of Davis's second monograph, the classic Monument, released by Arena Editions.

Davis's photographs have been exhibited internationally and collected widely. Her work appears in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art (New York), the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Chicago Museum of Contemporary Art, the Houston Museum of Fine Arts, and the J. Paul Getty Museum which held an exhibition of Davis's prints in 1999. Davis has received several commissions from public and private institutions such as the Lannan Foundation -to work on an American project -, the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University, and the Nature Conservancy -to produce a photographic survey of the High Plateau of Utah.

Davis lives and works in New York.

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