Sunday, August 5, 2012


Whale Watching in the Pacific Ocean. 

by Hector Gabino

Whales close to the coast of Victoria Island, Vancouver / Photo by Hector Gabino


Whale watching in British Columbia is an extraordinary experience. Set out on a whale-watching tour to spot Orcas (killer whales), humpback whales, Pacific grey whales – all in their natural habitats.
Whale-watching opportunities abound May through October, and tours leave from major cities such asVancouver and Victoria, along with more remote locations such as Northern BC and off the north and west coasts of Vancouver Island (named by Travel + Leisuremagazine as one of North America’s Best Whale Watching Spots in 2010).


Photo by Hector Gabino

Sunday, July 22, 2012


World Refugee Day: 15 Storytelling Photos of Refugees Around the World


June 20, 2012 /Photography News/ O
bserved on June 20 each year, the World Refugee Day is dedicated to raising awareness of the situation of refugees throughout the world.

The day was created in 2000 by a special United Nations General Assembly Resolution. June 20 had previously been commemorated as African Refugee Day in a number of African countries.

These photos tell stories of men, women, and children who have fled their country under danger of discrimination, conflict, and aggression, to find safety and shelter elsewhere in the world. 

Refugee in Malta. Photo: Olmo Calvo Rodríguez

A family of the Madi tribe returns home from a refugee camp in Uganda, unable to go back to their family plot, occupied by the Internally Displaced Persons from other parts of southern Sudan.
28/10/2008. Nimule, Sudan. UN Photo/Tim McKulka. www.un.org/av/photo

Bahn refugee camp, 50 km from the Liberia/Ivory Coast border. This camp, set up by UNHCR, has capacity for 15,000 refugees. At the time the picture was taken, it was accomodating about 2,000 - but more people are arriving from Ivory Coast every day, fleeing the fierce fighting and political unrest there. The UK government is providing an urgent emergency aid package to help tens of thousands of people affected by the deteriorating humanitarian situation in Liberia and the Ivory Coast. Photo: Department for International Development/Derek Markwell

Refugees in Malta. Photo: Olmo Calvo Rodríguez

Woman and children in Turkish refugee camp at the end of the first Gulf War. Photo: Brian Kelly

Coping with disasters: Refugees and displaced persons in Southeast Asia. An elderly refugee resting at the Lubhini Transit Centre in Bangkok, Thailand. There are about 2,000 refugees in this camp from Cambodia, Vietnam and Laos and they will be going to the United States, Canada, Italy and France. 01/07/1979. Bangkok, Thailand. UN Photo/John Isaac. www.unmultimedia.org/photo/

Rohingya children in the Nayapara refugee camp. The Rohingyas are a persecuted ethnic and religious minority from Myanmar, and the groups in Cox's Bazar fled that persecution in 1991 to live in Bangladesh. Photo: Ruben Flamarique/Austcare

Refugees in Malta. Photo: Olmo Calvo Rodríguez

Refugees in Malta. Photo: Olmo Calvo Rodríguez

Boho refugee camp, Somalia. Photo: Frank Keillor

Dheisheh refugee camp, Bethlehem, Palestine. Photo: Reham Alhelsi

Burmese refugee project. Photo: Saoire O'Brien

Refugee women at the Shamshatoo camp at a frontier province in North-West Pakistan. The camp was a temporary home to some 70,000 Afghan refugees. 12/03/2001. Pakistan. UN Photo/Eskinder Debebe. www.un.org/av/photo/

Kosovar refugees fleeing their homeland. [Blace area, The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia]
01/03/1999. Blace. UN Photo/R LeMoyne. www.un.org/av/photo/

De-Deur refugee camp. Arine Tusenge from Burundi is among refugees that found themselves out in the open again after several they were evicted from a shelter on the Vaal, South Africa.They had been moved to the shelter after 2008's xenophobia related attacks. They fear re-intergration into society and prefer to stay in the open.01-10-09. Photo: Tawedzerwa Zhou 

See also: Sahrawi: Maghreb's Forgotten Refugees, by Paulo Nunes dos Santos








 

Saturday, July 21, 2012


Adam Pretty on Shooting the Olympic Games

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By David Walker

Adam Pretty Boys Field Hockey at Youth Olympics 2010
© COURTESY OF GETTY IMAGES/ADAM PRETTY/GETTY IMAGES
From Adam Pretty's POYi prize-winning sports portfolio, Australia's winning goal of the Boys Gold Medal Hockey match against Pakistan at the 2010 Youth Olympics. To see more of Pretty's images, click on the Photo Gallery link below.

Getty Images staff photographer Adam Pretty has won numerous international awards, including Sports Portfolio first place awards at Pictures of the Year International in 1999, 2000 and 2010, and the Sports Story first place award at the 2011 World Press Photo competition. Pretty will be in London in July to cover his sixth Olympic Games since starting his career in the late 1990s at The Sydney Morning Herald.

PDN: After five Olympic Games, how do you keep your images fresh?
Adam Pretty:
 I’m not shooting as much sports as I used to, so when I come back to the Olympics, it’s easier to be motivated [again]. But it is getting harder and harder for photographers at every Olympics, because TV takes up positions photographers used to have. So it becomes more of a battle, but that motivates you to keep pushing yourself to make better pictures.

PDN: What do you anticipate will be different about shooting at the 2012 Olympic Games?
AP: 
Previously we roamed around covering 20 different events. This time Getty will have photographers dedicated to certain venues because security will be tighter and the events are quite spread out. I’ll be on swimming and aquatics, then I’ll cover track and field.

PDN: How do you feel about that change?
AP: 
To be brutally honest, I do like the variety. But I’m getting a little older. If I were running around trying to do everything, I might crash and burn. You’ve got to realize the limitations. The Olympics is the toughest test you can have as a sports photographer.

PDN: Why?
AP:
 You’re working 16-, 18-hour days, competing against the best photographers in the world. You’ve got to get your pictures out quickly. You’re wired up and fired up.

PDN: How did you start shooting sports?
AP:
 I was at a boy’s school, and I just started shooting sports. There were quite a few egos running around, so it was pretty easy to sell pictures of the boys playing sports. Then I saw an exhibition of sports photography by the two Sydney Morning Herald photographers, Craig Golding and Tim Clayton. I got their book [Images of Sport, HarperCollins, 1993], and a couple other books, and taught myself to print from looking at pictures.

PDN: So you’re mostly self-taught?
AP:
 Yeah, but then I went to the Herald. Craig and Tim really took me under their wing. Then when I went to Allsport, Al Bello, Mike Powell and others helped me out. [Editor’s note: Getty acquired Allsport in 1998.]

PDN: What are the most important things you learned from them?
AP: 
Eye for detail, and really working on something until you get it. Also I started doing Australian Open tennis with Clive [Brunskill, another Getty Images staff photographer]. Looking at his edits, everything was great. That was the benchmark I had to get to.

PDN: What does it take to get there?
AP: 
You’ve got to love what you do, but I think it comes down to practice and patience. You’ve got to put the hours in. People say, “You’re so lucky to have this happen in front of you.” But it’s a percentage game: [Luck] happens to people who are there the longest. It comes down to having the patience and the drive to sit there and wait until you get that picture.

PDN: Can you describe what you look for when you shoot Olympic Games events?
AP: 
When I go to a venue, I have a quick look at the lighting, then look about to check out the background. I’ll seat myself [opposite the best background], and hope something happens in that little area, rather than try to cover the whole thing and just get something mediocre.

Sometimes you have to shoot the finish line, but if you have flexibility [in positioning yourself], you want pictures that push people. You want them to say, “Wow, how did he do that?” or “What’s happening here?” Whether it’s with the light, the composition or some sort of graphic edge you’ve put on the pictures.

PDN: I notice you shoot quite a bit from overhead, so your background is the playing field.
AP: 
If you start with a nice graphic canvas, and add to that the action and the emotion, then that’s when you get a good picture. A lot of guys I work with are good photographers, but they’ll sit where there’s a really bad background. And they’ll be like, “Look, I got the picture.” And yeah, it’s good action. But the more you look, you start to notice the messy background. As a photographer, you have to look at the composition, the lighting, the background and go through the steps to ask, Does it make a good picture? Are you building a good picture, rather than just taking a picture?

PDN: Isn’t good sports photography also about knowing the sport you’re covering really well, so you’re able to anticipate action?
AP:
 It’s good to know the sports. In swimming, I know where I can get pictures from. Definitely experience helps, but I don’t think it matters that much for some things.

PDN: What’s in your kit?
AP:
 For the Olympics, I’ll have a 14mm f/2.8, a 16-35mm zoom, a 24-70mm, a 70-200mm, then a 400mm. I’m also going to get a 200mm f/2 to replace another one that died. For the underwater [remote], I’ll use a 24mm f/1.4 just because the quality of the prime lens is better than the zooms, and you can’t change the zooms anyway in the underwater housing. For camera bodies, I have three Canon 5Ds. I don’t like to carry too much gear.

PDN: Do you carry any lights?
AP: 
At Olympic sports events, there’s no flash, although they don’t care if you use flash for some outdoor stuff.

PDN: Does that no-flash rule make it difficult?
AP:
 No. They have all these venues lit to certain standards for TV. The consistency makes it a little easier. You have to think less about lighting.

PDN: What parting advice would you give to photographers working on their sports action skills?
AP: Don’t spend too much time on the computer. I think that’s the trap now. You can make your pictures look great in Photoshop. But get off the computer, get out there and start shooting. You want to get your good pictures in the camera, not try to bring them to life after. You get that only by shooting, not by thinking about it. I mean, you need to think about it. But you need something spontaneous because that will surprise [viewers]. I think when you’re out of control slightly, that’s when you get the special stuff or the surprising stuff. So basically you get that by shooting a lot.
Related Article:

Vision Quest: An Israeli Photographer's Exploration of His Homeland

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By Conor Risch

Yaakov Israel The Quest for the Man on the White Donkey
© YAAKOV ISRAEL
"The Man On The White Donkey, HaBiqah, 2006." To see more images from the book, click on the Photo Gallery link below.

Israel’s political, historical and religious significance makes it one of the most heavily scrutinized nations in the world. Much is written and said about Israel in the global media, by academics and by politicians, and a lot of that discussion and analysis ends with fierce declarations from experts, pundits and armchair analysts about what Israel should do politically, militarily and socially. It seems as if everyone has an opinion about Israel, but how much do they actually know about it?

For those who’ve seen his large-format landscapes and portraits, photographerYaakov Israel has provided an opportunity to look more closely at Israel in a way that is curious rather than hypercritical, inquisitive rather than conclusive. His new book, The Quest for the Man on the White Donkey (Schilt), is the product of a years-long exploration of the nation of Israel that focuses on small details in the landscape that reveal something of its inhabitants—past and present—and on Jewish, Christian and Muslim people the photographer has come to know along the way.

Israel, who was raised in southwest Jerusalem, says he was initially inspired by the tradition of American photographic journeys made by the likes of Timothy O’Sullivan in the 1800s and Robert Frank, Joel Sternfeld and Stephen Shore in the latter half of the twentieth century. After embarking on the project, however, Israel realized that the small size of his country, which allowed him to travel to its borders and return home at night, meant that his journey would be quite different. “I understood that this wouldn’t be a journey in the conventional, geographical way,” Israel recalls. “It’s more like a mental journey through the land.”

What he wanted to do with the work, he says, is tell a story that would convey his experiences of people and places, and how those encounters affected his personal understanding of “the place that I was born in and live in today.”

Israel wanted social, political and religious issues to “exist in the work in a very subtle manner.” But he warns, “This is not a collective understanding, it doesn’t represent Israel in any way. It represents the way I was discovering it, and tells a story that is built around this journey and the experiences that came with it.”

The book’s title is taken from the Orthodox Jewish belief that the Messiah will return dressed in white robes, with a white beard and long white hair, astride a white donkey. During the course of his work, Israel found and photographed a man on a white donkey: a Palestinian farmer wearing worn shoes, gray jeans and a blue work shirt and baseball cap. “The day I took that picture I understood that all these myths and stories that are connected to all religions somehow exist in this place,” Israel says. “But not in the way they’re written … There are quite a few images that reflect all kinds of aspects that deal with religious myths from Christianity, Islam and Judaism. They materialized in various ways in front of my eyes during my quest.”

Conflating the Messiah with a Palestinian farmer reflects a subtle sense of humor. “When I thought of the name [of the project] and all of these small paradoxes, I thought it would be nice that all of these [political, social and religious] issues would be dealt with, but with just a touch of humor,” Israel says. “Sometimes I do feel that this area and all these religions that are part of this land are taken a bit to0 seriously.”

“You can’t help but be conscious of [Israel’s conflicts] all the time,” he adds. “But I think humor is a strong part of living like this in a way.”

In his photographs we see the entrance to an underground bunker in the Judean Desert, a concrete gateway that seems to open onto nothing but a hilly, barren expanse. At a beach on the Dead Sea, he photographed a road that seems to lead straight into a barbwire-topped, chain-link fence. There is an image of burnt palm trees, and another of an abandoned water park.

“These things talk about the people who occupied these landscapes,” Israel explains. Photographing human interventions in the landscape functions in a similar way to archeology, he adds. “It reflects what used to be there and who used to use it.”

Israel’s portraits show a young Bedouin man against a backdrop of trees, a female soldier standing on a bridge with the dome of a Christian church in the background. He photographed a pair of police officers, one sitting in their car and the other standing with a rifle, and a girl wading naked into the Sea of Galilee with her arms outstretched.

Israel works with an 8 x 10 field camera, which he says he chose more for practicality than any romantic notion about the medium. “It makes me stop and look slowly,” he says, “which isn’t something that I do a lot because we all live in the twenty-first century, running around like mad.” The field camera also encourages people to notice and interact with him. And if he asks to take their picture, the process often takes 20 minutes or more. “I respected them,” Israel says of his subjects. “They understood that it was important for me and agreed to do it. That also affected me, because you start getting to know people. I can be in Israel or in the territories and some of the people are Palestinian, some are Bedouin and I’m Israeli, and it got me to think that once it’s on a personal level, most people forget about politics.” He notes, however, that was not always the case, and some people reacted negatively.

When he set out to create his personal survey of his country, Israel wasn’t quite sure how to approach it. His previous work had relied on consistent compositional choices to bind individual photographs into a series, but he “wanted to do this project in a looser format” while still connecting all of the images through common ideas. As he edited and re-edited the work over the past five years, he says, “I was thinking a lot about the actual journey, where I went and what happened and how these things shaped my experience. Each image in the body of work represents a certain aspect, hint or metaphor that is crucial to the narrative that was accumulating as the journey continued.” Israel says his understanding of the work was altered “by the people that I was meeting and the places that I went through.
“It’s a place that you can get up in the morning and think one thing and then two hours later you’ll think the opposite,” Israel says of his country. “And that happens again and again. So [the work] is personal and combines all these quests to try and figure out this place that I’m living [in] and I am a part of.”