Archive for February, 2009

Busy with another church book project

Thursday, February 26th, 2009
Cebu book project

The more than century old Spanish era church of Bantayan Island.

For the past three weeks, I’ve been tracing up and down the roads of Northern Cebu, waking up early in the morning and hoping to have a good and sunny weather. Going back, I usually arrive home early in the evening tired from the day’s shoot.

The Archdiocese of Cebu will be celebrating it’s 75th anniversary this year and this book project is one of the activities that will highlight this event. Together with two other local photographers, we’re covering all the parish churches in this island province. I am doing the entire northern Cebu starting from Consolacion and ends with Asturias. This includes the parishes in the islands of the Camotes and Bantayan groups.

Is it easy? While I have done Philippine Church Façades as my first major book work launched August 2007, this time, interiors and belfry details are included. Couple that with a not always cooperative weather that I have to do some adjustments. Early in the month, there were several days of inclement weather that I opted to do all the interiors first. Whenever there’s a break in the usually overcast skies or rain, I do quick trips to the different churches for façade shots.

With just a few more days left in my stay here in Cebu before going back to Makati to work on my course final projects, it’s more likely that I will need to finish this by April. Right now, plans of going to Camotes are shelved due to bad weather forecast. But then, I’m just left with a few more areas to do and I’m done.

Desap work now at Asiatic Gallery of Fine Arts

Friday, February 13th, 2009

 My work Coping with a Desaparecido is currently on exhibit at the Asiatic Gallery of Fine Arts, one of the venues of Chobi Mela V from 11 – 20 February 09.

My co-exhibitor is Kosuke Okahara (Japan) of Agence Vu with his work Vanishing Existence – Abandoned Leprosy Villages in China. Gallery address is listed below.

Asiatic Gallery of Fine Arts
12 noon – 8 pm
5, Old Secretariat Road
Nimtoli, Ramna, Dhaka
11 – 20 February 09

Coping with a Desaparecido, the free ebook

Monday, February 2nd, 2009
desap_ebook

This work is now available as a free downloadable ebook. Get it by CLICKING on the image above.

Coping with a Desparecido, my work that is currently on exhibition in Chobi Mela V in Dhaka, Bangladesh is now available as a downloadable free ebook. What drove me to do this one?

I was looking at Masaru Goto’s outstanding website and other than the beautiful photojournalistic work, one thing that caught my attention was his downloadable PDF version. And I thought, why not?

Sample page 1

Sample page 1

Sample page showing thumbnails and captions.

Sample page showing thumbnails and captions.

Making this viewable offline is, I think, important in reaching out to interested parties. Another way of promoting my work. This PDF version is A4 sized and the images are large enough to cover about 90% of the paper. It consists of select 14 images with thumbnails and captions at the end pages. The photojournalist’s statement is also included in page 2.

Compared to Masaru’s layout, mine is more visually appealing. It was prepared with Adobe InDesign CS3 with built in security features that will limit printing as well as copying/extracting images. Metadata is also filled out.

get_adobe_reader Before you download the following files, please make sure you have a PDF reader. If not, grab it at the Adobe site by clicking on the graphic at the left.

Download Now

Coping with a Desaparecido (1155)

Beyond Words: Photographers of War

Sunday, February 1st, 2009

The documentary “Beyond Words: Photographers of War” is a compelling work that not only shows great images that have been taken in hostilities but, more importantly, delves right into the life and work of famous photographers who are identified often to be covering in the thick of conflicts around the world. Be it in Vietnam in the 60′s; the tensions in Rwanda and Liberia in Africa as well as in Chechnya, Russia; the killing sprees in Haiti and the genocides in Cyprus and Kosovo.

The likes of James Nachtway of VII; David Leeson of the Dallas Morning News; David Douglas Duncan, former Life Photographer; Jean-Francois Leroy, Visa pour l’Image; Jerome Delay, AP; Gary Knight, VII; Maggie Steber, independent journalist; Philip Jones Griffiths, Magnum are just some of the prominent photojournalists, men and women, that have been interviewed. They shared their life as war photographers, talked about their images and the stories behind them and give us a glimpse of what goes on in their mind and heart when they are out in the field.

Balancing these are inputs from photo editors that give one an idea of how they chose the photo to be published in the next day’s papers. It also includes deep questions facing the industry today especially in the intensifying battle for print space as well as the relevance and role of photojournalists in a more consumerist world.

We have this notion that the life of a war photographer is all travel, action and grit, ready to die for that particular photo that will finally end that conflict, perhaps a romanticized version of it. These might be true in some cases, but in this work, instead we are presented with a humanized face of these so called “demigods” who risk life and limb to get us those precious images.

Yes, covering wars is a photojournalist’s job. It is our obligation to bring to the world what is happening in the ground but we hear these people telling the great difficulties and endangerment that they have encountered that almost cost them their lives. The hard and quick decisions that they have to make as all around, they are bombarded by tanks. The many personal sacrifices they have to bear, leaving families at home as they are on the road much of the time. The deep moral questions that they ask themselves, time and again, as they encounter yet another tragedy, yet another murder, yet another act of violence. They are just ordinary mortals, indeed, who feel, agonize and live to witness the atrocities and evil that mankind can inflict on his fellowmen.

One of the questions that struck me was this: can photography change the world? Two photographers’ responses are worth pondering: “I don’t believe that photography can change anything… I think it can be though, a witness to change, to be part of the process for change,” said Larry Towell of Magnum while Horst Faas, former AP photographer and editor, “Photography cannot make history, it can influence history…”

Will this be the path for me? If an opportunity comes, why not? Even just to experience it, see for myself and have a jab at influencing history.