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Great photos from Flickr that ‘make music’

Category : Female self-portraiture, Flickr Photo of the Week, General

As a tribute to World Music Day today, lets listen, I mean observe, some photos by fellow Flickrettes that are so great that they make music.

M is for Music by sevgi.k.

M is for Music by sevgi.k on Flickr

9.365 & 17/52 Awesome Canadian music by nathascha.

9.365 & 17/52 Awesome Canadian music by nathascha, on Flickr

music by basilyskos (so busy).

music by basilyskos (so busy), on Flickr

music... by kkozanecka.

music... by kkozanecka, on Flickr

Music Maker by www.LKGPhoto.com.

Music Maker by www.LKGPhoto.com, on Flickr

love music? ♥♫ by lisaluvz {busybee}.

love music? ♥♫ by lisaluvz {busybee}, on Flickr

Music was my first love... {1/52} by Anam Cara Photography ॐ.

Music was my first love... {1/52} by Anam Cara Photograph, on Flickr

Lover's Concerto by ilovestrawberries (Carmi).

Lover's Concerto by ilovestrawberries (Carmi), on Flickr

INTERVIEW with documentary photographer, Gabriela Bulisova

4

Category : Featured articles, Interviews

“A single refugee is a tragedy; over four million refugees is a statistic….”
Gabriela Bulisova, Guest

Today is World Refugee Day, a day dedicated to raising awareness of the situation of refugees throughout the world. It is with great honor that ChiqClicks bring to you an exclusive interview with Gabriela Bulisova, to discuss her work in advocating the plight of Iraqi refugees in her project Guest, on Iraqi refugees in Syria and The Option of  Last Resort, on Iraqi refugees in the United States.

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An Iraqi refugee who entered Syria illegally lives in fear of deportation if found by the Syrian immigration authorities. A well-to-do architect in Iraq, he is now left with absolutely no money and zero prospects for finding a job. He is facing eviction from his apartment and is unable to provide for his wife and two little children.

1. Describe yourself in one sentence

Aseel, a 19-year-old Iraqi refugee, gets ready to go to her friend's house to study for an upcoming high school exam. The belongings portrayed behind here are the only possessions this family of seven owns.

I uncompromisingly believe in the power of compassionate and concerned photography; photography offering not just a voyeuristic view into lives and struggles of others, but inspiring an active response in those confronted by such photographic images.

2. How and why did you start using photography as an advocacy tool for marginalized people?
In 1995, I traveled around areas of Ukraine, Belarus and western Russia, which, a decade after the catastrophic accident, still suffered from the poisonous radioactive release. I was just a young observer, a total stranger to people I met, but people wanted to talk to me. They needed someone willing to listen to their grievances, their stories, their cries for help. Those encounters imprinted indelible memories and became a force for an inspiration to ”do something meaningful.” A couple of years later, a friend handed me a camera — an old analogue Minolta — and I knew that was ”it” — that was the tool I needed to start telling stories on behalf of people who could not tell them themselves. My first project with a camera in my hand took me to Iraq (2002) with Physicians for Social Responsibility, whose mission was to break the UN sanctions and deliver aid to orphanages, hospitals, schools, etc. Then, a year later, I went back to Chernobyl contaminated areas.

This Iraqi Chaldean Christian, who worked in Baghdad's Green Zone with several American companies, recently resettled with her family in Detroit, Michigan. She desperately misses Iraq and the managerial positions she loved and found meaningful. She works in a grocery store now, a job she despises yet depends on for her financial survival. While working for the Americans, she met the man she wants to marry, despite her family's disapproval over his Islamic upbringing. She waits, secretly, with tears in her eyes, for his special visa permit approval to come to the United States. (Special visas are sometimes issued for Iraqis who worked with American Armed Forces or American companies).

3. Your projects Guests and The Option of Last Resort, features Iraqi refugees in Syria and the United States. Is there a particular reason why you choose to highlight Iraqi refugees over other refugees?

Imra was severely burned when a bomb targeting her father, a former military intelligence officer, hit her family's house. Although she is eight years old, she remains illiterate. Her family entered Syria illegally, making her ineligible to attend school. She is in an immediate need of medical treatment for her abdominal burns.

The decision to work on a project about displaced Iraqis was a personal one. From the beginning of my engagement with the project, I consciously and specifically intended to focus on the struggle of Iraqis, although I know full well that many other millions of displaced persons around the world are enduring the same or similar hardships. One can easily get overwhelmed by all the injustice and destitution around the world and become passive or paralyzed. I often respond to projects/stories intuitively — I know when it is the ”right” one.

I was, I am, very upset by the US waging war on Iraq. There is so much to say about the criminal wrongdoing, about all the innocent civilians killed and wounded, about the physical, emotional, and psychological toll. We cannot even begin to foresee what the long-term consequences and the aftermath of this conflict will be.

But the matter of displaced Iraqis is perhaps the single most under-reported, understated consequence of the war. We, who initiated the conflict, have a fundamental responsibility to these people…especially, especially (!) if these refugees were targeted with assassination and had to flee their homes because they helped the United States, because they were affiliated with the US Army, the US government, or US businesses. We have direct responsibility to these people!

4. What’s the significance of the title for your projects, The Option of Last Resort and Guests?
For Iraqi refugees in the United States, the State Department considers resettlement in the US “the option of last resort.” In fact, the US has only admitted a trickle of refugees whose lives are threatened because they helped the United States.

In the case of refugees in Syria, the Syrian government does not afford Iraqis who fled their country refugee status and instead considers them “guests,” a designation that prevents them from working or attending school.

Mr. Nazar was a successful currency trader in Iraq. Saddam Hussein, in order to set a public example against trading with western companies, arbitrarily imprisoned Mr. Nazar and ten other financiers, and subsequently cut off their right hands. In 2004, Mr. Nazar was brought to the United States to help demonstrate Saddam’s monstrous crimes. He met in person with President Bush and numerous other dignitaries, and as a gesture of good will, he was fitted with a prosthetic arm. In Iraq, the word spread fast of his support of the American invasion and his trip to the USA, turning him and his family into an immediate target. After his life was threatened, he decided to ask for asylum, thinking he would find the same red-carpet welcome he found on his first visit. Today, resettled in the United States, Mr. Nazar and his family face dire poverty and great disillusionment over their living conditions. “We live in exile here”, says Mr. Nazar, “If we could, we would return to Iraq.”

5. In your exhibition in Women in Photography, you said:

“When I meet, interview, and photograph those living daily in unimaginable hardship and despair, I am often overcome by my own inability to do more to respond. But the dignity, resilience, and persevering humanity of these individuals leaves me with no other choice but to cling to the belief that, with pictures, one can ultimately alleviate pain and rally support for social justice.”

In relation to your photographs taken for these projects, how has it alleviated pain and been used to rally support for social justice (or how do you plan to use it for those purposes)?

A Mandaean mother holds a photograph of her dead son, a victim of religious violence.

Everyone working in this field is confronted on a regular basis by the fear that our work is not prompting enough change. Ultimately, I feel the only answer to this is to press forward and continue trying to do all we can to reach others and build a consensus for social justice.

In the case of my projects with Iraqi refugees, I have given talks, hung exhibitions, participated in panel discussions, and published photos. I collaborated with several members of Congress and NGOs on an event at the US Congress specifically addressing the need to help displaced Iraqis. There is much more to be done. Perhaps, little by little, by refusing to give up, we will raise more awareness about this important and timely issue.

6. Do you plan on covering Iraqi refugees in other countries?
My hope is to go to Iraq to photograph people who became known as internally displaced persons (IDPs) — people who, due to violence waged against them, became refugees in their own country.

7. How do you gain access to these areas?
First, lots of advanced research and preparation. Second, reliance on a local ”fixer” — someone who knows the issue, speaks the language, understands what I am after and why I am there. Access is often the hardest thing to obtain, and much depends on the actual timing of a project, on people’s willingness to meet, and their readiness to share their life stories.

Fatin's father, who was shot in Baghdad by militia members, is now paralyzed and in urgent need of lifesaving surgery. As a result of his inability to earn money and provide for his wife and their two little children, he made the extreme gesture of offering his seven-year-old son for sale to any family who can take better care of him than his own father can now.

8. The National Press Photographers Association has a code of ethics guideline. In your experience photographing marginalized people – what do you think is missing in that guideline (or should be emphasized more, in relation to your field of work)?
I think all of these guidelines are extremely important when photographing marginalized people – people who often encountered deeply upsetting personal tragedy or trauma. But I think point 4 especially needs to be emphasized:

Treat all subjects with respect and dignity. Give special consideration to vulnerable subjects and compassion to victims of crime or tragedy. Intrude on private moments of grief only when the public has an overriding and justifiable need to see.

A sunlit street in the early morning hours in Sayyida Zainab, an extremely poor neighborhood in Damascus, where Iraqi refugees come to escape war and sectarian violence. In many ways, Sayyida Zainab represents the ideal concept of Iraq, an enclave where sectarian divisions are a foreign concept, a religiously and politically unified community.

9. What camera equipment do you use?
Canon EOS 5D

9. Having concluded a year as a Visiting Assistant Professor at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, St. Mary’s City, MD where you taught photojournalism, and also teaching at the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore, MD – What is the most important thing you tell your students?

Here’s what I emphasize:

Respect. Compassion. Patience. Dignity. Sensitivity. Endurance. Curiosity. Passion. Uniqueness of one’s vision. The importance of conducting research, seeking truth and accuracy, and striving for integrity.

One ought to keep looking and seeing and watching and listening and thinking and feeling. One needs to remain open and flexible and understanding. Prepare for a long-term commitment: expect go back, again and again and again. And, of course, one needs to adhere to the NPPA code of ethics guidelines (which we collectively read out loud in the very first class).

10. With DSLR cameras becoming more and more affordable, many up and coming photographers are self-taught. As a holder of a degree of Master of Fine Arts in Photography and Digital Imaging, what do you think are the advantages of studying photography formally?
I think it very much depends on the person and, also, what the objectives are for wanting to obtain MA or MFA. I needed guidance, structure, space and time. I knew I wanted to go into teaching. I have no regrets for spending two additional years within an academic institution (except for acquiring disturbingly large student loans, but that’s a different story).

Yes, there is an amazing pool of creative and dedicated autodidacts, self-taught photographers, who learn by doing it, by throwing themselves into the work. They are unafraid to try new styles and approaches, to apply their own vision and ways of seeing and telling. Why not? What matters is not the degree you hold but your commitment to do good – to be compassionate and concerned. What I am also seeing is a tendency to go out and try and then, later on, go back to school to obtain a degree.

Known in Sayyida Zainab neighborhood as "the mother of Iraqis", Ahlam, is a social worker par excellence. Officially, she is the outreach coordinator for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. She is also a teacher who gave up a large part of her apartment to convert the space into a free language school for 75 pupils who come to study English and French. Ahlam was detained and imprisoned, and the school was shut down. After months of uncertainty about her status, Amnesty International succeeded in getting her released and transported to the United States. No details about her whereabouts are known yet.

11. Who are the other women photographers that inspire you?
This would be a long list…sigh…here are just a few names of amazing and inspiring women photographers: Alexandra Boulat, Susan Meiselas, Lynsey Addario, Stephanie Sinclair, Andrea Bruce, Carol Guzy, Melina Mara…to mention but a few.

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In 2010 alone, these projects have been exhibited in Photoworks Gallery (Glen Echo, Maryland), Amnesty International Human Right Art Festival (Silver Spring, Maryland) and the Delaware Center for the Contemporary Arts.

Bulisova who is a native of the former Czechoslovakia, has also received numerous awards and grants such as the CANON “Explorer of Light” Award for Chernobyl “Half-Lives, Half-Truths” photo project, (2004), Trust for Mutual Understanding Grant, The Capitol Hill Arts Workshop Juried Exhibition, Washington, DC (Best of Show), amongst many others.

View more of Bulisova’s works at:
Metro Collective http://www.metrocollective.org/
Women in Photography http://www.wipnyc.org/
Photoshelter http://gabrielabulisova.photoshelter.com/

And we’re live!

Category : General

After a couple of weeks of brainstorming, research and email exchanges, ChiqClicks is finally live!

ChiqClicks is a photography blog for women with a focus on interviews and news of women photographers to inspire, as well other fun stuff about photography. Read more on the About page.

Many thanks to people who made it possible. In no particular order to Glenn Guan, Linda Gavin, Asther Lau, Jennifer Tai, Sherrie, Suzanne Lee, Cheng Leong, Anna-Rina, Kamal and Wendell D. Gingging – most of whom are photographers who helped me with content even before seeing the actual site!

And most of all, thank you to Mike Tee, IT extraordinaire, who helped in every process of this set up.

And to readers, welcome and happy reading.

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Feel free to give me feedback and/or suggestions by emailing editor[at]chiqclicks[dot]com