Watching the Windermere Cup 2011 crew races on the Montlake Cut at the University of Washington. There were tons of dogs and families out this year enjoying the sun and the race festivities. The Husky men and women cleaned up, winning by almost too much in their races against opponents like Cambridge and Stanford.
I’m working on a portrait series for the University of Washington Center for Experiential Learning. Here are a few frames of Erin and Traci, who were fun and easy to work with. Very talented too – Erin is double majoring in journalism and dance, while Traci is double majoring in math and dance.
This interactive survey of the night sky was featured on Wired and Seattlepi.com among other places, and is a wonderful interactive view of the Milky Way and more. It was created by Seattleite Nick Risinger with the help of his father.
This is another from the “Healing a River” project I have been working on for almost a year now. In this image, two women unload crabs they caught in the Duwamish River. Signs nearby warn that no shellfish from these waters, including crabs, are fit for human consumption. They women claimed the signs were old and explained to me that they had been feeding crabs like these to their families for years. The mother and daughter, immigrants from the Philippines, now live in Federal Way and make the trip often to go crabbing in the toxic waters of the Duwamish.
This is from a long term project I’ve been working on about healing Seattle’s Duwamish River. It’s incredibly polluted but multiple local groups are organizing to clean up and revitalize the river. This picture is from a group that meets regularly to pray and energetically heal the river using various spiritual practices, including Johrei.
I was pleased to be able to see The Bang Bang Club on opening night at the NW Film Forum in Seattle on Friday. This film tells the story of a close group of photojournalists during the height of Apartheid violence in South Africa. I enjoyed the film although it was quite depressing … and as a film/creative piece, it left much to be desired. The sound, for one, was mixed poorly and so I missed quite a bit of the dialogue. But it was very interesting to witness what are supposedly quite realistic re-enactments of combat photojournalism and scenes where outstanding photographs, including Pulitzer Prize winners, were made. I was also disappointed to see that the story pretty much avoided any mention of black, coloured, Indian, or any photojournalists of other ethnicities in the country who were working at the time. In a story that takes place in the extreme racism of Apartheid South Africa, it seems problematic to find that our heroes at the end of the day are a group of white men. There are no doubt many many unnamed heroes in the struggle that are left invisible. Of course, the film is based on the book by photojournalists and “members” of The Bang Bang Club, Joao Silva and Greg Marinovich, and that story simply didn’t include anyone but white photojournalists because that’s who happened to be in the “club.” And that is who won the Pulitzers, etc.
The film did do a great job, in my opinion, of offering the ups and downs of conflict work and the difficult emotional and ethical situations that photojournalists deal with. Specifically, we see Kevin Carter eventually commit suicide as well as try to explain whether he helped a starving little girl after photograph her being pursued by a vulture during a food crisis. Overall I give this film a B-. If I weren’t a photojournalist I would probably be less excited about the whole thing and give it a C-.
This was some work I did for the Amgen Scholars program a while back, which I just had a chance to see in print for the first time in a meeting this morning. My picture is the one on the right, with the two guys. The Amgen Scholars program is pretty cool; it gives undergraduates an opportunity to work with outstanding faculty in the sciences during a summer program at one of several prestigious universities, including the University of Washington.