Sunday, November 26, 2006

Pakistan: A Tent for Eleven


Why am I here...a small mountain village in Pakistan? Why have I spent my time, my money, rejected the relative safety of home, and embraced inconveniences as necessary adventures? Why am I in this place, photographing a man, a woman and their nine children outside a tent where they have lived through the winter after a devastating earthquake? Will my portrait of his family give him a new home? What does he get out of this? I left him with an embrace and a meeting of the eyes. May I not forget. May we all never forget.

(24-105mm IS lens @24mm, 1/100 sec, f5.6 ISO800

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Thailand: Long Neck and Ethics



Here is an ethical dilema/question for you photographers. Women of the Padaung Long Neck people along the Thai Burma border have worn these ornamental brass rings for centuries. The reasons for this practice have been lost for generations. Was it for beauty, or was it to make them too ugly for slave traders? Whatever the origin, one of the main reasons it seems to continue today is tourism. Their villages along the border have become a magnet to tour groups in the last ten years as the tribes have fled persecution in Burma. Would this custom quickly die out if photographers and tourists did not pay to tour the villages? Are we perpetuating a custom that does have health consequences for the wearer?

(Both images 70-200 IS lens, 1/500 sec, f2.8 ISO 100)