Saturday, November 17, 2007

Soundslides Embed Utility

It's now a cinch to embed your Soundslides slideshow unto your website and/or blog.

Joe Weiss has developed a web-based utility which allows you to enter the URL of your Soundslides, and you immediately get the necessary code to add to your website and blog....however be mindful that the dimensions of your slideshow must fit the width of your blog.

Here's the link: Soundslides Embed Utility

Friday, November 16, 2007

Heather McClintock: Uganda

Image Copyright © Heather McClintock-All Rights Reserved

Heather McClintock received her photography degree from the New England college in NH, and relocated to New York City. Seeking a deeper connection to humanity by documenting humanitarian work, her passion for recording human condition was fulfilled in Northern Uganda.

She focused on the Acholi people, proud and resilient, but brutalized by the 20 years of horrific civil war. The Acholi children in particular have endured traumatizing treatment, and are in dire need for assistance. Hopefully Heather's photographs have and will resonate with as many people as possible to make the Acholi's lives better.

Her work in Uganda has earned Heather well deserved recognition through numerous awards and publications.

A remarkable photographer...I urge you to explore all of her portfolios.

Heather McClintock's Acholi People

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Charles Meacham: Sikhism

Image Copyright © Charles Meacham-All Rights Reserved

Charles Meacham was born just outisde of Philadelphia, and his first major travel experience was a year trip touring the U.S. in a 1971 Volkswagen camper. Overheating and bursting into flames, the van died along a highway in Arizona, but his interest in travel did not.

His image of a Kazakh eagle hunter in Western Mongolia, whose rugged image earned him first place in the National Geographic Traveler's 15th Annual Photography Competition. Since then his images have been seen internationally in almost every medium.

His current projects include images of Sikhism, documenting the lives of ex-soldiers from the Chinese civil war (on both sides of the Taiwan Strait), and the workings of the living fort of Jaisalmer in Rajasthan, India. When not traveling he can or cannot be found riding his motorcycle in the mountains of Taiwan.

Sikhism was founded in the 16th century Punjab district, and was founded by Guru Nanak and is based on his teachings, and those of the 9 Sikh gurus who followed him. It is a monotheistic religion which stresses the importance of doing good actions rather than merely carrying out rituals. Sikhs worship at a Gurdwara. and the Sikh scripture is a book called the Guru Granth Sahib.

Harmandir Sahib (The Golden Temple)in Amritsar is the most sacred and holiest shrine of Sikhism It is located in Amritsar, and Sikh devotees come to the Temple from all over the world to offer their prayers.

Meacham's splendid photographs of the Sikhs showcases adherents to the faith, from young boys to elderly patriarchs. I'm not sure what is the significance of the orange turbans worn with dark blue long shirts...I assume it's some sort of uniform worn by the Sikhs during a certain festival or ritual. The Sikhs are often described as the Warrior-Saints.

Note: My thanks to Charles who explained that orange is the holy color of the Sikh religion, and blue was the favorite color of the 10th Guru and the traditional color of his Nihang Army.

Charles Meacham

Frédéric Sautereau: Burma

Image © Frédéric Sautereau-All Rights Reserved

The International Herald Tribune reports that more than 1,500 people from over 20 countries have registered for a major gems auction in Burma this week, despite calls from human rights groups to block the purchase of precious stones from the military ruled country. Burma is one of the biggest jade and gem-producing countries in the world, and international auctions are a major revenue earner for the regime. It is expected that the auction will generate the equivalent of $200 million. International business transactions with Burma are done in Euros because of the United States' sanctions...so here's the question: why don't the Europeans follow our lead in this?

I thought that Frédéric Sautereau's recent October 2007 photo essay on Burma would be appropriate in conjunction with the above news, which contrasts with the poverty and miserable conditions afflicting the people of Burma today. The black & white photographs by Frédéric do an admirable job in conveying the hopelessness of the Burmese especially in view of the callous disregard of international businesses to their plight.

Frédéric Sautereau, director of the collective agency Oeil public, is a freelance photograph since 1995. He's principally a documentary photographer whose career has taken him to the war-torn cities of Belfast, Nicosia, Mostar, Jérusalem, and Mitrovica.

Frédéric Sautereau's Burma

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Women News Network: White Shadows

Image © Tewfic El-Sawy-All Rights Reserved

I am privileged to have my photographic essay on the widows of Vrindavan featured on Women News Network.

The WNN feature is titled "Nothing to Go Back To” - The Fate of the Widows of Vrindavan, India", and has been released to over 500 UN agencies and affiliates via WUNRN.

WNN - Women News Network - uses the highest standard in journalism to bring in depth international women’s news not found in our current public media stream. Startingfrom a writing assignment to cover the UN Commission on the Status of Women in 2006, director Lys Anzia saw the vital need for media women to report the many times hard and suffering international stories of women. WNN stories have appeared on UN affiliate and agency publications through WUNRN - Women’s UN Report Network and UN-INSTRAW, the United Nations Institute of Training and Research for the Advancement of Women.

WNN's "Nothing to Go Back To” - The Fate of the Widows of Vrindavan"

WUNRN's Podcast of the feature

Matt Brandon: Kashmir



Matt Brandon has been photographing since he was 10 years old with his father’s Cannonet QL Rangefinder, and now specializes in NGO, relief and humanitarian projects. Until recently he lived in Kashmir.

The Government of India featured his work in Indian embassies around the world in a traveling exhibition on Kashmir...so it's only natural that I bring his slideshow showcasing its people to TTP.

While the soundtrack chosen to accompany the slideshow is delightful (Ethnic Kashmiri music has Central Asian influences, but here it sounds more Hindi), the YouTube piece does not render justice to Matt's scintillating photographs, so head over to visit his website and blog:
The Digital Trekker

National Geographic: Photography Grant

The National Geographic awards one grant of $50,000 for Photography annually to a professional photojournalist. The money will go directly to funding the production of a photography project, which may be considered for publication in National Geographic magazine and/or the National Geographic magazine website or for possible exhibit at National Geographic headquarters or other venues.

Professional photographers who would like to be considered for the NG Grant must submit a grant application. Details are available here.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

New York Times: Bab El-Sheikh (Iraq)

Image © Johan Spanner/NY Times-All Rights Reserved

Every week, I try to feature a post -using editorial or documentary photography- that relates to current world news or international politics, to which I add my perspective and opinions.

The New York Times brings us an audio slideshow from Baghdad's neighborhood of Bab El-Sheikh (ie door of the sheikh), which has the reputation of being an island of tolerance amongst the horrors of sectarian strife in this unfortunate capital city. The neighborhood is ancient, and goes back more than a thousand years ago, when Baghdad ruled the Islamic world.

Nowadays, Bab El-Sheikh is still extraordinary because here, Sunnis, Shias, Kurds and Christians live together with ease...woven together by its ancient, shared past, bound by trust and generations of intermarriage.

The narration of the slideshow is by Karim Hilmi, an Iraqi Shia (he pronounces it in the erroneous American way as Shitte- presumably so that we will understand) who lived in the neighborhood since his youth. The photography is by Johan Spanner.

I'd like to see more of these reportages where it's local Iraqis, narrators, photographers, journalists, who tell us and show us what is happening to their country. It would humanize the Iraqis in our eyes...and make us understand that these are people just like us, who are living under unimaginable conditions, partly caused by our military occupation of their country.

The NY Times' Bab El-Sheikh

Barbara Paul: Timeless Laos Exhibit

Barbara Paul photographs people of remote regions of Asia and Africa, where few travelers visit. Timeless Laos: Monks, Festivals, Village Life captures the ethnic dress, tribal and religious customs, festivals and daily life that make Laos unique. From villages to ancient ruins, from daily market life to holiday festivals, Ms. Paul's photographs provide a rare glimpse into a land that seems timeless even as the modern age encroaches.

Timeless Laos: Monks, Festivals, Village Life , an exhibit by the Westport photographer Barbara Paul, will be on display at the Rye Free Reading Room in Rye, NY from November 20 through January 3, 2008 , with a reception on Sunday, November 25, from 1-3PM.

Ms. Paul's previous exhibits have featured Eastern Tibet, Ethiopia, Papua New Guinea, Mali and other countries.

For further information, contact the Rye Library 1061 Boston Post Road,Rye, New York 10580 on (914) 967-0480 or via its website.

Monday, November 12, 2007

Jim Lo Scalzo: Evidence of my Existence



Evidence of My Existence is a summary of a new memoir by US News & World Report photojournalist Jim Lo Scalzo. He combines passages from his now published book with photographs, video, and Super-8 film, and brings us a personal account of his years spent with an obsessive wanderlust, and moving from one new story to the next.

Jim Lo Scalzo says that "travel is a compulsive craving. Oh yes, it is...it's an addiction and a buzz....and just what most photojournalists, travel and documentary photographers feel and experience before, during and after their assignments.

You can also watch it on MediaStorm at a better resolution, and additional related links.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Sheila McKinnon: Invisible Women

Image © Sheila McKinnon-All Rights Reserved

Sheila McKinnon is a Canadian photographer-journalist who lives in Italy, and who worked in Africa and Asia for publications such as the New York Times, Newsweek and Die Welt. She has worked as a humanitarian photographer for UNICEF, Africare, FAO and other similar agencies.

I feature Sheila's work entitled "Invisible Women" which is in the form of a flash slideshow. It seems a bit dated because the photographs are not as clear as they should be, but this doesn't take away form the beauty of the images nor of the message the photo essay imparts.

The slideshow is graced by the lovely vocals of Rosie Wiederkehr, a Swiss singer and musician...don't turn off your speakers!!! It's really good.

Sheila McKinnon's Invisible Women