Tag: Ed Kashi
-
Ending The Stigma Of Incarceration: A Conversation With Ed Kashi
Ending The Stigma Of Incarceration (Part Three): A Conversation With Ed Kashi Ronald Day en route to work, NYC. © Ed Kashi / VII Photo – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – R… via Prison Photography: http://prisonphotography.org/2012/10/07/ending-the-stigma-of-incarceration-part-three-a-conversation-with-ed-kashi/ The way I look at this advocacy journalism,…
-
Ed Kashi’s Reflections on His Photos, in Diaries and Letters
Link: Lens Ed Kashi’s new book “Witness Number 8: Photojournalisms” (Nazraeli Press 2012) is a collection of images, diary entries and letters to his wife, Julie Winokur. Mr. Kashi spoke about the book with James Estrin this month at the National Press Photographers Association’s Northern Short Course in Fairfax, Va. Their conversation has been edited.
-
Ed Kashi, Seeing Eye-to-Eye
Ed Kashi, Seeing Eye-to-Eye Why do photographers avoid photos that have eye contact? “We don’t want to exist in our pictures,” says Ed Kashi, whose exhibition “Eye Contact” opens in Brooklyn this week. via Lens Blog: http://lens.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/08/31/seeing-eye-to-eye/ One day, I thought: “This has happened to me for 30 years. I could walk down the street…
-
Oil and Conflict in the Niger Delta – Ed Kashi, VII
In this interview with VII The Magazine Ed Kashi talks about his years covering the explosive situation in the Niger Delta. This story has everything, big oil companies, a corrupt political situation, great wealth and extreme poverty, war and the 50th anniversary of Nigeria’s independence. Link: VII The Magazine
-
Ed Kashi on his environmental photography projects in Niger Delta and Madagascar | guardian.co.uk
Ed Kashi on his environmental photography projects in the Niger delta and Madagascar Ed Kashi on his environmental photography projects in Niger delta and Madagascar via the Guardian: http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/interactive/2010/may/06/ed-kashi-niger-delta-madagascar The photojournalist Ed Kashi’s work chronicling oil extraction in the Niger delta, the Curse of the Black Gold, won him the Prix Pictet Commission, whereby he…
-
Ed Kashi, Host podcast
Ed Kashi was at HOST Gallery speaking in conversation with Jacobson about the various projects that have shaped his career, in particular, work on Northern Ireland, Kurdistan, aging in America and the Niger Delta. Link: Ed Kashi, Host podcast
-
On Assignment: Syria Changes, to a Point – Lens
On Assignment: Syria Changes, to a Point Ed Kashi has been photographing Syria for 20 years. He has seen it change in some ways but, as a journalist, he still feels he operates under a cloud. via Lens Blog: http://lens.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/02/25/assignment-26/ Ed Kashi is a photojournalist and filmmaker. He spoke with Lens last summer about “Three,”…
-
Ed Kashi – Telegraph
Ed Kashi Kashi is a photojournalist, filmmaker and educator. His award-winning work spans from high-end print photojournalism to experimental film. via Telegraph.co.uk: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/photography/7017938/Ed-Kashi.html What’s the greatest picture you didn’t take? There are too many, so I choose not to dwell upon the near and far misses. Suffice it to say, like life itself, photography provides…
-
The Visual Student » Internship Perspective: Ed Kashi Studio
Stephanie Smith interned for photojournalist Ed Kashi during the summer of 2009. Smith, a senior at Ohio University, will graduate in June 2010. Link: The Visual Student » Internship Perspective: Ed Kashi Studio
-
Ed Kashi: A new book, a new visual perspective | RESOLVE
Link: Ed Kashi: A new book, a new visual perspective | RESOLVE — the liveBooks photo blog: In Ed Kashi’s new book, THREE, images from his 30 years as a top documentary photographer are combined into triptychs that consciously abandon the idea of context or traditional narrative. Some of those triptychs will be part of…
-
Ed Kashi: Beyond Multimedia – RESOLVE
Link: Ed Kashi: Beyond Multimedia – To create change, storytellers must conquer multiple media platforms | RESOLVE — the liveBooks photo blog: When Ed came to Stanford a few months ago for an Aurora Forum on the What Matters book, I was reminded how unsatisfactory the term “documentary photographer” is when applied to someone like…
-
Ed Kashi Travel Notes – A return to the Niger Delta reiterates the challenges of overseas photojournalism
RESOLVE — the liveBooks photo blog » Archives » Ed Kashi Travel Notes – A return to the Niger Delta reiterates the challenges of overseas photojournalism: After publishing Curse of the Black Gold: 50 Years of Oil in the Niger Delta in 2008, Ed returned to the Delta in May for nearly seven weeks to…
-
Showcase: Kashi, Kashi, Kashi
JAMES ESTRIN – Lens Blog: Ed Kashi is a photojournalist and filmmaker who has spent the last 30 years documenting social and political issues. In his new book, “Three” (PowerHouse books 2009), images are stripped of their context and arranged in triptychs, relying on visual or metaphoric cues.
-
Ed Kashi: Three
From photo-eye: In a world inundated by visual imagery, our ability to take in more than one image at a time has become innate. In fact, our attention span demands it. Three, a book of triptychs by acclaimed photographer Ed Kashi, plays on the visual appetite of a hectic world. These triptychs span eras and…
-
Ed Kashi – Three
From Visura Magazine: It came to me in a dream… I was laying in bed one morning and three images from a story in Brazil flowed through my mind’s eye like a cinematic strip. This idea of three images… seeing in threes… became a focal point for combing through my more than twenty years of…
-
Ed Kashi's Curse of the Black Gold: 50 Years of Oil in the Niger Delta
Ed Kashi has recently released his latest project- Curse of the Black Gold: 50 Years of Oil in the Niger Delta. Check it out here.
-
Kashi's "Flip Book" Kurdistan Presentation Debuts On MSNBC
PDN: The video begins simply. Title cards set the stage for a story about the Kurds, the ethnic group of northern Iraq who now live in relative peace. Then all madness breaks loose. Daily life in Kurdistan unfolds as a staccato, stop-motion dance. Cars jam a street, children play, soldiers train, nurses tend to patients…