Tag: james whitlow delano
-
Photographing the 10 Year Anniversary of Japan’s Fukushima Nuclear Accident – PhotoShelter Blog
Photographing the 10 Year Anniversary of Japan’s Fukushima Nuclear Accident – PhotoShelter Blog James Whitlow Delano traveled to Sendai, Japan to capture images of a region battered by a tsunami and nuclear reactor meltdown on the 10 year anniversary. via PhotoShelter Blog: https://blog.photoshelter.com/2021/03/photographing-the-10-year-anniversary-of-japans-fukushima-nuclear-accident/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+PhotoshelterBlog+%28PhotoShelter+Blog%29 Photojournalist and Founder of @everydayclimatechange James Whitlow Delano has lived and worked…
-
Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up – 4 December 2020 – Photojournalism Now
Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up – 4 December 2020 This week on Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up – the final video interview for Photojournalism Now: In Conversation 2020 is now live featuring award-winning photojournalist James Whitlow D… via Photojournalism Now: https://photojournalismnow43738385.wordpress.com/2020/12/04/photojournalism-now-friday-round-up-4-december-2020/ This week on Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up – the final video interview for…
-
The people left behind by Philippines’ brutal war on drugs – photo essay | Global development | The Guardian
The people left behind by Philippines’ brutal war on drugs – photo essay One year after visiting the Philippines to document the impact of President Rodrigo Duterte’s crackdown on drugs, photographer James Whitlow Delano returns to the city of Navotas, Metro Manila, to assess the impact of a campaign that has now claimed up to…
-
James Whitlow Delano – The Little People: Equatorial Rainforest Project « burn magazine
James Whitlow Delano – The Little People: Equatorial Rainforest Project James Whitlow Delano The Little People: Equatorial Rainforest Project In the Eden-like rainforests that once clothed the equator, multinational corporations are quietly stealing the resources of po… via burn magazine: http://www.burnmagazine.org/essays/2015/08/james-whitlow-delano-the-little-people-equatorial-rainforest-project/ This is exactly what has happened in Borneo, where indigenous Dayak peoples have found…
-
James Whitlow Delano – Fifth Dispatch: Slash Cameroon’s Rainforest and Lose Ancestor’s Souls — BagNews
James Whitlow Delano – Fifth Dispatch: Slash Cameroon’s Rainforest and Lose Ancestor’s Souls – Reading The Pictures In this longread and photojournal for BagNews Originals, photographer James Whitlow Delano details the impact of multinational logging and palm oil operations on the people and rainforest of Cameroon. via Reading The Pictures: http://www.bagnewsnotes.com/2014/05/james-whitlow-delano-fifth-dispatch-slashing-cameroons-rainforest/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+Bagnewsnotes+(BAGnewsNotes) In this longread and…
-
James Whitlow Delano – Fourth Dispatch: My Odyssey to Understand What Gold Wreaked on Suriname
James Whitlow Delano – Fourth Dispatch: My Odyssey to Learn What Gold Wreaked on Suriname – Reading The Pictures In this longread and photojournal for BagNews Originals, photographer James Whitlow Delano chronicles the influx of foreigners, the ecological toxification and the adverse cultural effects of intensive mining in Suriname. via Reading The Pictures: http://www.bagnewsnotes.com/2013/12/delano-fourth-dispatch-what-gold-wreaked-on-suriname/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Bagnewsnotes+%28BAGnewsNotes%29 In…
-
James Whitlow Delano – Third Dispatch: Tribes Losing Rain Forest Battle to the Logging Conglomerates
Link: James Whitlow Delano – Third Dispatch: Tribes Losing Rain Forest Battle to the Logging Conglomerates — BagNews The Baram River, the jungle thoroughfare for the indigenous Dayak peoples, snakes through the last great forest in Southeast Asia, the interior forest of Borneo, and into Penan territory. Not long ago, the Baram River and its…
-
James Whitlow Delano – First Dispatch: Return to the Rainforest
James Whitlow Delano – First Dispatch: Return to the Rainforest – Reading The Pictures Over the months ahead, I want to make some sense about how a long-term project on the needless destruction of the equatorial rainforest came to be an obsession and how I have attempted to visually portray this form of daylight robbery.…
-
What Does Mercy Look Like? James Whitlow Delano Sought an Answer – NYTimes.com
What Does Mercy Look Like? James Whitlow Delano sought an answer — many answers — and is raising money for hospice and palliative care in the process, as Niko Koppel reports. via Lens Blog: http://lens.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/02/22/what-does-mercy-look-like/ Mercy is commonly defined as compassion, forgiveness, kindness or an act of piety. But photographs of prisoners reaching through bars,…
-
Worth a look: 100eyes – China: The Past is a Foreign Place | dvafoto
the talented group of photographers that comprise this issue: James Whitlow Delano, Markel Redondo, Katharina Hesse, Ryan Pyle, Xiqi Yuang, Wayne Liu, Carolyn Drake, Rian Dundon, Tim Franco, Eric Guo, Christian Als and Holly Wilmeth, M. Scott Brauer Link: Worth a look: 100eyes – China: The Past is a Foreign Place | dvafoto
-
Showcase: A Thirsting Planet – Lens
Carrying a Leica with a 35-millimeter lens, James Whitlow Delano photographs fast and unobtrusively. He says that photography is part of his D.N.A. “I am moved by light,” he said. “I like to tell stories. There is this need to travel and learn that I have been lucky enough to indulge.” Link: Showcase: A Thirsting…
-
James Whitlow Delano – From the "Train of Death" to the "Wall of Shame"
Much has been made of the perils undocumented workers face crossing the southern border of the United States in search of work and a better life. For Central Americans, the U.S. border marks the end of one of the longest, most treacherous migrations on the planet. Still there has been a rise of 50 percent…
-
James Whitlow Delano | Photographer | Japan | Raw Take
Deb and I had the good fortune to cross paths with James Whitlow Delano because of the Blue Planet Run book and Redux Pictures. His images of China’s desertification caught our eye for the book (They didn’t make the final edit). But more than the subject of the photographs, it was the tone, the feeling…